SafeValue must use [property]=binding: The sue was stated in 2010 and decided on April 5, 2021, when the Supreme court ended this long-play case. It agrees that 11.5K lines of the code are the subject of the copyright and belong to the Oracle; however, it allows a user to copy portions of someone else's work without payment or permission if it is the fair user. The Supreme Court considers Google LLC the fair user, and the fair use of the subject of the copyrights can be a defense to copyright infringement. The Supreme Court claims that The underlying purpose of copyright is to incentivize innovation and creativity.
There is a very simple four parameters test that courts usually use to determine fair use or not:
- the nature of the copyrighted work;
- the purpose and character of the use;
- the volume and substantiality of the share taken;
- the impact of the fact of using on the defined market.
After considering all four of the above factors, the Supreme Court concluded that Google's use of 11,5K lines of code is legitimate.
The court concluded that the subject of the copyright was, by its nature, the user interface that does not perform tasks and gives users the ability to manipulate and control the programs that do perform tasks. Considering this fact, the Supreme Court declared that Google incorporated "only what was needed to allow users to put their accrued talents to work." The Supreme Court understands that using the subject of the copyright in creating an entirely new platform on a new device is considered transformative, which is fully compliant with the second feature of fair use. The commercial goals in consideration of this claim were not played a significant role.
The third point was also on Google's side. The 11,5K of code was less than 1% of the total of the relevant Java program. The reason why Google copied the ASI code was the fact that programmers were familiar with the interface, nothing more.
At least the Supreme Court checked the global effect on the market thoroughly. Despite the reality that the Java-based mobile phone business entered a deadly dive, the Android has been recognized as a qualitatively different product, which cannot be compared to the Java-based mobile phone generation.
(see http://g.co/ng/security#xss)