Showing posts with label NetApp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NetApp. Show all posts

Friday, February 22, 2013

Google requests more time to respond to Oracle's appeal brief and in-depth amicus curiae briefs

Late on Thursday Google filed a motion with the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit requesting an extension of almost two months for its answer to Oracle's Android/Java copyright appeal brief. If this motion is granted, which is pretty certain given that Oracle and Google had already agreed on mutual non-opposition to their extension requests back in November, Google's response to Oracle's brief and to the amicus curiae briefs filed in support of Oracle's appeal by industry leaders, creatives and academics including a former U.S. copyright chief will be due on May 23, 2013 instead of March 23, 2013.

It was a given that Google was going to put in this request. It had a procedural deal with Oracle in place, and it has no business reason to favor swift resolution of the appeal. Google is also appealing the parts of the dstrict court's ruling adverse to its positions, but it stands very little to gain at the appeals court, while this is Oracle's chance to bring the Android/Java copyright infringement case (which originally was also, in part, a patent case) back to life. During the district court proceedings Google also consistently advocated delay.

Google presumably elected not to request the negotiated extension from the court prior to seeing Oracle's brief because a deal between the parties is not a substitute for good cause from the court's vantage point. Google's good-cause theory has two main parts. Just like Oracle did in its November motion, Google stresses the complexity of this case and the huge number of documents in the record. Additionally, Google appears to be quite impressed with the depth of Oracle's brief and the breadth and depth of the amicus curiae briefs:

"6. As an additional good cause for the requested extension, Google notes that six amicus briefs have been filed in support of Oracle:

  • Brief for Amicus Curiae Ralph Oman Supporting the Position of Plaintiff-Appellant and Urging Reversal (document 46) (6,959 words);

  • Brief of Amici Curiae Picture Archive Council of America, Inc. and Graphic Artists Guild in Support of Plaintiff-Appellant Seeking Reversal (document 54) (6,390 words);

  • Brief for Amici Curiae Microsoft Corporation, EMC Corporation, and NetApp, Inc. in Support of Appellant (document 55) (4,965 words)

  • Brief of Scott McNealy and Brian Sutphin as Amici Curiae in Support of Reversal (document 58) (5,753 words);

  • Brief for BSA | The Software Alliance as Amicus Curiae in Support of Plaintiff-Appellee Oracle America, Inc. (document 59) (6,622 words); and

  • The Brief of Amici Curiae Eugene H. Spafford, Ph.D., Zhi Ding, Ph.D., and Lee A. Hollaar, Ph.D. in Support of Appellant (document 62) (4,497 words).

7. These six amicus briefs contain a total of 35,186 words—more than 2.5 times the length of Oracle’s opening brief (which contains 13,998 words). Google's First Brief will be its last opportunity to respond to these additional briefs (except to the extent that they bear on Google's cross-appeal)."

The last part means that the copyrightability and "fair use" issues raised in the amicus curiae briefs can be, in part, relevant to Google's appeal of the district court's finding of liability for the rangeCheck function.

The briefs have not entered the public record yet. Once they are all available, I will discuss their content in more detail. Some of the briefs have meanwhile appeared on the Internet. BSA | The Software Alliance (previously known as the "Business Software Alliance") published its submission on the organization's website. ArsTechnica obtained and published the brief filed by Microsoft, EMC and NetApp as well as the one submitted by the Picture Archive Council of America and the Graphic Artists Alliance.

The Microsoft-EMC-NetApp brief focuses entirely on copyrightability, arguing that interoperability should be addressed at the "fair use" level rather than denying copyrightability to original works as Judge Alsup did. As I explained in my post on Oracle's appeal brief and on previous occasions, copyrightability is a must-win item for Oracle. "Fair use" can be resolved by the Federal Circuit (as Oracle requests) but it could also be addressed at a new trial. I still see reports on the Internet that mistakenly believe the jury sided with Google on this one: the jury simply didn't decide at all. BSA | The Software Alliance supports Oracle on copyrightability and "fair use". The two organizations representing creatives don't address copyrightability (they presumably thought that software-specific issues aren't of sufficient concern to their membership, though I believe that creatives, too, should be interested in ensuring that original combinations of non-copyrightable elements remain copyrightable) but focus entirely on "fair use".

If there's one buzzword that really matters to both the copyrightability and the "fair use" issue, it's interoperability. Microsoft's brief accurately notes that Judge Alsup decided to give Google an interoperability privilege only for "convenience". Interoperability is not a copyrightability issue -- the rulings Judge Alsup cited to this effect did not really make interoperability a criterion in the copyrightability context at a closer look. And to the extent it's a "fair use" question, what Google did was not really about enabling two technology products to work together (interoperate) and communicate: the only objective was to attract Java developers to a competing platform.

BSA | The Software Alliance also addresses what it considers to be errors and misconceptions on Judge Alsup's part with respect to the definition and import of interoperability (these are my words, not the BSA's). The BSA's members clearly have a track record of advocating interoperability: they all build products that are, and must be able to be, used together with other companies' technologies.

Again, I'll elaborate on the substance of the amicus briefs once I've obtained all of them, including the submission made by former U.S. Register of Copyrights (Director of the U.S. Copyright Office or colloquially "copyright czar") Ralph Oman.

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Industry leaders, creatives, academics and former U.S. copyright czar support Oracle's appeal

On February 11, 2013 Oracle filed its opening brief in the appeal of the district court's ruling on the Google Android/Java copyright infringement case. Among other things, its brief clears up certain misconceptions concerning the role software patents and copyright play in the protection of software-related intellectual property. Yesterday (Tuesday, February 19, 2013) was the deadline for amicus curiae briefs in support of Oracle. This morning I found a really impressive list of filings on the Federal Circuit docket for this appeal. The amicus briefs themselves will likely enter the public electronic record today and/or tomorrow, and I'm going to review and discuss them all. In the meantime, let's look at the names of these supporters of copyright protection of original works. The persuasive impact of amicus curiae briefs depends not only on what is said but also by whom it is said.

Technology industry leaders: Sun founder, Microsoft, EMC, NetApp, Business Software Alliance

Sun founder Scott McNealy and former Sun EVP Brian Sutphin tendered a brief. Google is likely going to point to former Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz' testimony, and maybe Mr. Schwartz, who has an axe to grind with Oracle because of Larry Ellison's dismissive remark about his managerial skills, is going to submit an amicus brief in support of Google. The difference between McNealy and Schwartz is that the former founded this company and made it an industry leader, while the latter's track record is not held in particularly high regard.

There are two kinds of company submissions. On the one hand, the Business Software Alliance (BSA) made a submission. On the other hand, three companies -- Microsoft (represented by a former United States Solicitor General), EMC and NetApp -- filed a joint submission directly.

The BSA's members include (in alphabetical order) Adobe, Apple, Autodesk, Bentley Systems, CA technologies, CNC Software - Mastercam, IBM, Intel, Intuit, McAfee, Microsoft, Minitab, Oracle, Progress Software, PTC, Quest Software, Rosetta Stone, Siemens PLM Software, Symantec, TechSmith and The MathWorks. They collectively represent a high percentage of U.S. investment in software development, which dwarfs whatever Google and its Android hardware partners spend on software-related R&D.

Creatives: Picture Archive Council of America and Graphic Artists Guild

I'm not surprised that creatives are concerned about the wider implications of this case. The Picture Archive Council of America and the Graphic Artists Guild filed a joint brief. Here's some background on the two organizations:

PACA, the Picture Archive Council of America, describes itself on its website as "the trade organization in North America that represents the vital interests of stock archives of every size, from individual photographers to large corporations, who license images for commercial reproduction. Founded in 1951, its membership includes over 100 companies in North America and over 50 international members."

The Graphic Artists Guild's members are "graphic designers, Web designers, digital artists, illustrators, cartoonists, animators, art directors, surface designers, and various combinations of these disciplines" (freelancers as well as staff artists). Wikipedia has an interesting article on the Graphic Artists Guild, its activities and its history.

Former U.S. copyright czar Ralph Oman

The headline of one amicus brief stands out because it not only states support for plaintiff-appellant (Oracle) but also "urg[es] reversal". It was submitted on behalf of Ralph Oman, who served as Register of Copyrights (head of the U.S. Copyright Office) from 1985 to 1994. He's a Washington D.C. thought leader on intellectual property in general and copyright in particular, and has played a key role on the international stage (it's worth noting he stated at leading French university the Sorbonne). According to his profile on the website of George Washington University (where he is a professorial lecturer in intellectual property and patent law), Mr. Oman "helped move the United States into the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, the oldest and most prestigious international copyright treaty, a goal sought by U.S. Registers for 100 years". Wikipedia also mentions that he is "one of three founding directors of the U.S. Committee for the World Intellectual Property Organization".

If the Federal Circuit affirmed Judge Alsup's ruling with respect to copyrightability, or if Google ultimately prevailed on its "fair use" defense, intellectual property and especially copyright would be weakened. It appears that Mr. Oman is profoundly worried.

Academics: Purdue computer security expert Gene Spafford, UC Davis engineering professor Zhi Ding, Utah computer networking and IP professor Lee Hollaar

The three professors who submitted a joint amicus brief all have an engineering background, and one of them is additionally an IP expert.

Professor Eugene ("Gene") Spafford teaches computer science at Purdue University and, according to Wikipedia, "a leading computer security expert". He served on the President's Information Technology Advisory Committee from 2003 to 2005. A key free and open source software security tool named Tripwire was coded by one of his students but supervised by Professor Spafford, who (according to Wikipedia) "was later the chief external technical advisor to the Tripwire company during their first few years". He was involved in a similar supervisory role with COPS (Computer Oracle and Password System), another FOSS project.

Professor Zhi Ding heads BRAT-Lab (Broadband Radio Access Technologies Laboratory) at the University of California (UC) Davis, where he is currently Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering. He received his first degree in China but also studied in Canada and the United States. According to this profile, "[h]is research contributions cover a broad range of signal processing and communication problems including wireless transceiver optimization, blind channel estimation and equalization, multi-input-multi-output communications, multiuser detection, source separation, adaptive signal processing, parameter estimation, radar target discrimination, multimedia wireless communications, and cross-layer wireless communications".

Professor Lee Hollaar currently teaches computer networking and intellectual property and computer law at the School of Computing (formerly the Department of Computer Science) at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. So he's a technologist as well as an IP expert. His amicus briefs have previously had quite some impact on IP law in the United States. According to his biography, "he played major roles in adding two words to the vocabulary of intellectual property law:

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