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The AmeriKat giving tribute to Old Glory |
Although she has spent the bulk of her life in the UK, the AmeriKat is undeniably American. Her meows have a distinctive American twang, she is generally positive and she refuses to apologize if someone steps on her tail. But over 15 years later, on the eve of the Fourth of the July, Her Majesty's Government finally gave the AmeriKat permission to indefinitely stay in the UK. The poetry of the timing was not lost on the AmeriKat as she celebrated her right to remain in the UK, but also her right to return to the US. Although yesterday's celebrations did not see her watching as delicious aromas of charred vegetables and meat wafted over red, white and blue adorned revelers, the AmeriKat was still thinking about her
Founding Fathers and the role intellectual property played with the introduction of the
Copyright and Patent Clause in the US Constitution in 1787 and the first US patent being issued to
Samuel Hopkins on 31 July 1790 . Almost 230 years later, the US courts are still hard at work in striking the right balance for IP protection and the encouragement of innovation, but not always without criticism.
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You say "potato", I say "potash": the first US Patent |
Last Monday, the US Supreme Court denied Google's writ of certiorari to re-examine the
2014 decision of the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) in favor of Oracle which held that
application programming interfaces (APIs) in Java were subject to copyright protection. APIs are protocols that allow third-party software to communicate with an application. The CAFC's decision overturned that of Judge Alsup's in 2012
who had held that APIs were not protected by copyright law (see previous AmeriKat post
here). In referencing the
merger doctrine (an exception to the idea-expression dichotomy whereby the courts "will not protect a copyrighted work from infringement
if the idea underlying the copyrighted work can be
expressed in only one way, lest there be a monopoly on
the underlying idea"), Judge Alsup
declared that:
"So long as the specific code used to implement a method is different, anyone is free
under the Copyright Act to write his or her own code to carry out exactly the same function
or specification of any methods used in the Java API. It does not matter that the declaration or
method header lines are identical. Under the rules of Java, they must be identical to declare a
method specifying the same functionality — even when the implementation is different.
When there is only one way to express an idea or function, then everyone is free to do so and
no one can monopolize that expression. And, while the Android method and class names could
have been different from the names of their counterparts in Java and still have worked, copyright
protection never extends to names or short phrases as a matter of law."
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No ordinary Joe in the eyes of the CAFC |
The CAFC
overturned this decision last May holding that the merger doctrine did not apply as the evidence showed that Oracle had "unlimited options as to the selection and arrangement of the 7000 lines Google copied" (see El
meownora's piece
here). Google, in utilizing Oracle's APIs as part of the Android mobile operating system it developed, infringed Oracle's copyright in the Java software. In their petition,
Google urged the Supreme Court to limit the the circumstances in which software makers are able to wield copyright law to restrict the use of basic software commands (an argument
not out of kilter in the SEP/FRAND patent landscape). This argument would have been critical to the industry as APIs are widely used across the telecoms sector. A 2014
Forbes article discussed the increasing strategic importance of APIs in the sector (see article
here).
There has been an outcry from many
commentators that the
Supreme Court's ultimate denial, and the
filing by the Department of Justice, was based on the CAFC's fundamental misunderstanding of the difference between APIs and software and will allow Oracle and others to "have an unprecedented and dangerous power over the future of innovation" (s
ee the EFF's amicus brief which was signed on behalf of 77 computer scientists). The case will now return back to federal court in San Francisco where the court will decide whether Google's use of the software was "fair use".
Microsoft has dropped its patent infringement suit against Kyocera which claimed that three of Kyocera's Android smartphones infringed seven of its patents. The parties have
now entered into a agreement which expands upon a previous licencing arrangement with Kyocera which "enables the companies to use a broader range of each other's technologies in their respective products through a patent cross licence" (see Microsoft press release
here). Kyocera follows Barnes and Noble, Foxconn, Invetec and
Samsung in the line of companies that have recently settled with Microsoft.
right balance... by the courts?
ReplyDeleteAmeriKat has been away a bit too long. Here in the US, it is up to Congress - not the courts - to strike the balance.
You are absolutely right to pick me up on that loose drafting; it is the legislature that strikes the balance. But the courts, in reaching their decision, have to give effect to the legislative intent. They do so by means of statutory interpretation where possible, but also through the history, purpose of the legislative and other canons. They don't operate in a vacuum.
ReplyDeleteYou are absolutely right that it is the words (and where unclear) the intent of Congress that rules the day.
ReplyDeleteYou are also absolutely right that statutory construction is the driver (and not the "feelings" or predispositions of the Court). You are aware (I hope) that Congressional intent is not "an automatic" and comes into play where the plain words have inherent (not purposefully implied) ambiguity, right?
Sadly - currently in the U.S. - the vacuum would be better than the philosophical wax of nose mashing that we have.
Which is why the slip of stating the wrong branch was caught so easily.