Showing posts with label Supreme Court of the United States. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Supreme Court of the United States. Show all posts

Sunday, January 2, 2022

Anti-judge-shopping initiative by Judicial Conference may spur internationalization of patent enforcement, further concentration of NPEs and litigation funders

There undeniably is a problem to be solved when one United States District Judge--Judge Alan Albright--gets about 20% of all U.S. patent infringement complaints. With the greatest respect for his admittedly tremendous expertise in patent litigation and his ability to work both smart and hard, it's mind-boggling when you consider that there are roundabout 700 U.S. district judgeships, and every district judge can hear patent cases (unlike in jurisdictions where patent complaints may be brought only before specialized divisions of particular courts).

Apart from his reluctance to transfer cases out of his district (and his division, unless he gets to preside over them anyway), and some other positions that patentees love him for, he may actually be much more balanced than people think. For example, he has recently invalidated patents on Alice abstraction (§ 101) grounds in a Facebook case and some other case. There was a fracking case last year in which I acknowledged he had a point. I listened in to a VLSI v. Intel trial, at the end of which Intel was cleared of infringement last summer, and saw no indication of pro-patentee bias. Let's put it this way: I keep watching developments in that district, but I try hard not to be intellectually dishonest when I voice criticism.

Now, it looks like his "market share" is going to go down soon. The annual report of the Judicial Conference under Chief Justice Roberts contains the following passage that is all about the W.D. of Tex.:

"The third agenda topic I would like to highlight is an arcane but important matter of judicial administration: judicial assignment and venue for patent cases in federal trial court. Senators from both sides of the aisle have expressed concern that case assignment procedures allowing the party filing a case to select a division of a district court might, in effect, enable the plaintiff to select a particular judge to hear a case. Two important and sometimes competing values are at issue. First, the Judicial Conference has long supported the random assignment of cases and fostered the role of district judges as generalists capable of handling the full range of legal issues. But the Conference is also mindful that Congress has intentionally shaped the lower courts into districts and divisions codified by law so that litigants are served by federal judges tied to their communities. Reconciling these values is important to public confidence in the courts, and I have asked the Director of the Administrative Office, who serves as Secretary of the Judicial Conference, to put the issue before the Conference. The Committee on Court Administration and Case Management is reviewing this matter and will report back to the full Conference. This issue of judicial administration provides another good example of a matter that self-governing bodies of judges from the front lines are in the best position to study and solve—and to work in partnership with Congress in the event change in the law is necessary.

"Chief Justice Taft was prescient in recognizing the need for the Judiciary to manage its internal affairs, both to promote informed administration and to ensure independence of the Branch. He understood that criticism of the courts is inevitable, and he lived through an era when federal courts faced strident calls for reform, some warranted and some not. [...]"

This Chief Justice is particularly institutional in his thinking. One can see that all the time, such as when he managed to avoid an overturning of the Illinois Bridge doctrine while still finding for the plaintiffs in the Pepper v. Apple dispute. Here, his desire--and he's obviously not speaking for himself alone--is to address the issue with the means at disposal of the judiciary, hoping to obviate the need for legislative intervention. It's about self-governance by the courts to the greatest extent possible.

The solution designed to curb Judge Albright's market share is to assign the patent cases brought in the W.D. of Tex. to different judges there, even though plaintiffs would obviously choose Judge Albright and file their complaints with the Waco division, which amounts to judge-shopping under the current framework.

Let's analyze this like any proposed solution to any identified problem must be looked at. Is it going to work in principle? Are there workarounds? And what about unintended consequences?

I would be shocked if the highest echelons of the federal judiciary of the United States couldn't make it work in principle. The proposal wouldn't have reached this milestone if they knew they couldn't make it happen--and in this case probably without requiring help from Congress.

But whether something works or "works-works" are two separate things. Would defendants necessarily be better off in other W.D. Tex. divisions? I know companies who would probably answer with "it can't get worse." Still, some of the other judges in the same district may also develop a predilection for patent cases, and in any event they'll likely look at the local case law. There are currently 13 district judges there plus 6 senior district judges.

There was a time when the Munich I Regional Court--a different jurisdiction, but one that has a rotational intradistrict assignment in place--had one plaintiff-friendly rocket docket and another division that was pretty much the opposite (by now they have three that are all very similar). What plaintiffs did there might also work in W.D. of Tex., provided they assert multiple patents from a portfolio and not just one or two patents:

Plaintiffs could bring multiple cases, either asserting patent P1, P2 and P3 separately against defendant D1, or a pattern of P1 v. D1, P2 v. D2, and P3 v. D3. They would then see to whom those cases get assigned, and then drop cases assigned to other judges in favor of amending their complaints pending before Judge Albright or a likeminded judge in the same district by adding more patents and/or more defendants. A patentee with a very large portfolio might actually bring the first few cases over patents that aren't as important as the ones that would be introduced later (through amended complaints). Now, it probably won't be practical to really bring dozens of cases just to be sure that one case will end up with Judge Albright. But if a few other judges there also turn out plaintiff-friendly, then the gamble might work.

What could patentees do for whom the workaround doesn't solve the problem--or if the workaround was thwarted as well?

That question leads us to a limitation of the focus of the Judicial Conference on intradistrict assignments. They try to do what they can, and no one can criticize them for that. Still, the ultimate impact may fall short of the expectations with which some companies and lobbying entities have lobbied Congress for this (which in turn got the Judicial Conference interested).

Patentees seeking to enforce their intellectual property rights increasingly have to "think global." If a patent is on the verge of expiration, or has already expired, then it's all about damages and there's probably no better place in the world to sue for damages than the Western District of Texas--or the Eastern District, but after TC Heartland some defendants are in a better position to get cases moved out of there (the rise of the Western District, where many tech companies have actual operations, is a result of TC Heartland to some degree). But the most effective kind of enforcement is to obtain injunctions (or import bans, such as from the ITC, which are just a special type of injunction).

As I wrote on LinkedIn a few hours ago, the Western (and also the Eastern) District of Texas can "compete" with venues like Munich, Mannheim, or London--not on injunctions (due to eBay), but by giving patentees leverage through the threat of major damages verdicts. Any change in U.S. patent enforcement policy (such as a new position paper by three federal agencies) that softens, slows down, or otherwise complicates enforcement results in ever more litigation in other jurisdictions:

  • In Europe, the "race to the bottom" continues and will likely heat up when the Unified Patent Court (UPC) commences its operation sometime this year. For a long transitional period, patentees can choose to bring their complaints in the equivalent of a U.S. district court or a local UPC division-and if they assert more than one patent, they can do both in parallel and see how it works out. After Brexit, the UK judiciary is no longer bound by European Court of Justice decisions, which has actually made the UK an even more attractive place to enforce (though a local legislative initiative concerning standard-essential patents may reverse that trend in the specific context of SEPs). So if one seeks leverage from patent enforcement in Europe, one has the choice between multiple national courts, the UPC, and the UK, which is totally independent.

  • China is an increasingly important patent litigation venue. And there are other Asian countries. For example, OPPO is now defending against patent infringement complaints by both Nokia and InterDigital in India, where InterDigital won an anti-antisuit injunction against Xiaomi that probably helped it obtain a settlement last year.

Globalization favors big budgets and large portfolios. I believe that the America Invents Act (AIA)--while the idea wasn't bad--is part of the reason (as is eBay) we've seen the rise of "mega-NPEs." The "anti-Judge-Albright rule" might further contribute to that.

Again, I do understand the concerns of those who have been sued in the Western District of Texas lately. But they should all think it through. The less leverage a person or entity holding a single U.S. patent has, the more the patent enforcement game becomes a battle of materiel, a question of scale. And then the same ones who lobby for stronger defendant's rights are exactly the ones who will complain about hedge funds and other major litigation financiers becoming involved.

The UPC favors deep-pocketed patent holders. What's happening (or about to happen) in the United States with respect to SEPs and the Western District of Texas will serve to reinforce the trend toward consolidation and concentration. We may see some of the effects this year, but more likely in 2023 and 2024.

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Saturday, January 16, 2021

Best outcome of impeachment for development of law: Supreme Court clarifies meaning of "high" in "high crimes and misdemeanors"

After years of making pro-Trump comments (except in connection with patent policy, where a couple of his appointees did terrible things), I was shocked by the absurd positions he took on SARS-CoV-2 last year--even by utterances that weren't nearly as crazy as suggesting that one might inject disinfectants. Those who have read my comments on other issues know that I view COVID-19 as the moment of truth. Politicians who failed to do their job in that most critical context in a long time don't deserve to be supported or trusted, but I found myself in agreement with politicians I fundamentally disagreed with on other issues. Only a minority of Trump supporters has a similar set of priorities, but apparently enough for him to lose the election. While some conspiracy theorists portrayed the outcome of the mail-in vote in various places as a statistical anomaly, there actually is a simple explanation: people so afraid of COVID they'd rather vote by mail were extremely unlikely to have faith in Donald Trump. What might have been a statistical anomaly under "all other things being equal" circumstances just doesn't apply here.

Similarly, the fact that Trump held huge rallies, unlike the President-elect, doesn't tell us anything about the fairness of the election. Even under normal circumstances, rallies aren't tallies. But they do normally indicate the enthusiasm of a party base. The 2020 U.S. presidential campaign was totally different, mostly because of COVID, and secondarily because many people didn't have to be huge Biden fans in order to vote for him: this time around, even Hillary would most likely have won. And I almost feel like predicting that four years of the Biden Administration, unless his waning physical fitness requires him to step down too early, will be followed by one or two Harris terms, and I'd even predict she'll win Texas, considering some overall trends and developments, including some relocation decisions by tech companies.

The GOP will have to reinvent itself and probably won't even start that process anytime soon. A tectonic shift comparable to the one under FDR--who broadened the appeal of the Democratic Party--would be needed for a GOP candidate to be elected POTUS again. Without the Electoral College, the GOP would already have had to reposition itself on a lot of issues, as they won the popular vote in only one out of the last eight presidential elections, and who knows whether that one exception would even have happened without 9/11.

It's obviously hard to strike the right balance between giving everyone, including minorities, fair access to an election and making an election secure. Congressman Dan Crenshaw and his guests, one of whom is a University of Texas law professor, made great points about that in this podcast. Shortcomings should be addressed and I hope Democrats will be principled enough to do that in certain states. That said, there's really no reason not to assume Trump's covidiocies--and not a multi-state conspiracy to commit election fraud--cost Trump the election.

There have been credible reports of Trump being "entranced" by watching the Capitol riots on TV, a state of mind that prevented him from saying the right things in the right away-and sooner. The American system of government wasn't under serious threat for even one second, but if those reports are indeed true (all I can say is they sound credible and they're consistent with everything that is known, including the timeline), then it would even have been warranted to invoke the 25th Amendment.

The impeachment resolution by the House of Representatives isn't based on his behavior in front of his TV set in the White House, which disqualifies the person in some fundamental ways (I'm really very disappointed), yet doesn't qualify as a "high crime and misdemeanor." So the article of impeachment talks about his call with Georgia Secy. of State Brad Raffensperger as an effort to subvert the election certification process, and about incitement of an insurrection in accordance with the 14th Amendment.

Trump's defenses are obvious: he's already said the Raffensperger call was about "settlement" of pending litigation, and in his January 6 speech he used the word "peacefully" (though in that same speech he urged supporters to "fight like hell"), so there's a free-speech issue that the Supreme Court resolved in Brandenburg v. Ohio, clarifying that it's all free spech until someone incites "imminent illegal action" (but by design--"likely" to have the effect--not coincidence).

What individual Republican senators (especially the 20 who need to run for re-election next year unless they retire) consider to be best for their career remains to be seen. For their party, it would undoubtedly be best if a sufficient number of them joined Democrats and impeached Trump. Given that the sole remedy relevant after he's left office will be the disqualification from any future federal office, there is, however, the possibility of the Supreme Court hearing an appeal. And that's what I actually hope will happen, but for the sake of clarification.

As the Cornell Law School webpage explains, there are different opinions on what the "high" in Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors" means.

What would benefit Trump would be an interpretation of "high" as "very serious," as some argue that the word "other" means it must be at a level with treason and bribery. But the alternative interpretation--and that's actually the one I prefer--is that "high" in this context refers to the office of the one who committed the alleged wrongdoing, not in the sense of making anything reproachable a potential basis for impeachment, but connecting it to how someone carried out their duties as opposed to, say, a minor offense in their private life.

The line-drawing problem here is that too low a standard would give Congress too much latitude. In parliamentary democracies, such as some European countries, the head of government can be voted out of office by a parliamentary vote. The U.S. system is more presidential. And now, with all that happened on 1/6, there is a situation where the exacting standard of criminal law may not be met. Also, the fact that it's "only" about disqualification (because it's too late for removal from office) doesn't change the standard, though some commentators almost make it sound like that.

The Senate basically makes its own case law so far in presidential impeachment trials. I don't think it would be wrong for senators to vote for impeachment even if Trump's actions might be protected in a conventional criminal proceeding by rules affording settlement talks and free speech strong protection. Honestly, I would be disappointed if the Senate acquitted him because future presidents should learn a lesson even before they take office so they refrain from actions like that in the first place.

The Supreme Court can clarify what the word "high" means in this particular context. I know some don't think so, but I found arguments in favor of review more convincing, though I don't mean to say that--in more timely cases--a removal from office should be delayed that way. I hope the SCOTUS will have the last word. The judges appointed by Trump, at different levels of the judiciary, have recently shown their independence. Democrats will find it hard to trust them on this one, but I believe they should. Justice Barrett is new, but Justices Gorsuch and Kavanaugh have been serving on the SCOTUS for some time already and they're going to look at the issue, not the party. They know that whatever they decide will apply next time that a Democratic president may engage in problematic conduct. And there may now actually be a line of Democratic presidents that will be longer, possibly far longer, than many Republicans would acknowledge. Even without Trump's disgraceful fourth year in the White House, Texas was going to turn blue in the near term, as Arizona has (possibly on a lasting basis), and Puerto Rico can't be denied statehood for too much longer. One can only hope that Democratic policies won't move too far to the left...

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Friday, October 9, 2020

Afraid of losing the Android-Java copyright case, Google was looking for patents to countersue Oracle, but failed to find any suitable ones

I just published a detailed fact check that highlights at least ten major untruths Google's lawyer told the Supreme Court on Wednesday. Over the last 24 hours I received information on what was going on inside the Googleplex about four to five years ago. At that stage, Oracle had won its first Federal Circuit appeal against Google (the one over copyrightability), and the case had become a pure copyright case, as Oracle didn't pursue its patent infringement claims on appeal.

There was a lot of concern on Google's part that they were going to lose the "fair use" retrial. So they were asking themselves what they could do to gain leverage.

In the patent litigation context, the way most disputes between companies of the Oracle-Google type end is a cross-licensing deal: if both sides had "nuclear" patents, "mutually assured destruction" would ultimately solve the problem.

I know from a first-rate Google source (which I must protect and which contacted me through non-Google channels) that Renny Hwang, by now Google's patent litigation chief but then already on this case, conducted a search for patents that Google could use to countersue Oracle.

The criteria that Mr. Hwang defined were the following four:

  • They had to be capable of inflicting serious damage.

  • They had to target Oracle's core business, not just one of the various lines of business Oracle had acquired over the years (such as the MySQL open source database).

  • They absolutely positively had to be no search patents, even though Google had identified at least four search technologies in Oracle's offerings that it could have attacked. Google's strongest patents are in search--but with Google being a monopolist in that market, it couldn't seek injunctive relief over search patents without serious antitrust implications. The latter is my explanation--my source just told me that search technologies were off limits, and antitrust is a plausible reason.

  • They had to be homegrown as opposed to patents acquired from the likes of IBM. It would have looked bad in the eyes of a judge and, especially, jury if Google had countered litigation over Sun's homegrown IP with patents acquired from third parties.

It turned out Google didn't own any patents that would have met all four criteria at the same time. Therefore, they didn't bring a countersuit.

What my source doesn't know for sure is whether Google was going to sue right away (possibly delaying the retrial by persuading Judge Alsup to consolidate all claims, in which case Google would have told the jury "look, they also infringe on our rights") or, which I actually consider more likely, would firstly have threatened Oracle with a countersuit in an effort to work out a settlement.

I've been able to verify that my source is indeed a person who at the time held a position with Google in which the source would have been likely to be in the know. I try to be careful about "inside baseball" except when it's too relevant not to share with you, my esteemed readers. Earlier this year I broke the news on an EU-ordered patent/antitrust mediation effort between Nokia, Daimler and many of the world's leading automotive suppliers failing. No one has been able to find out who my sources were, but the accuracy of the information was subsequently confirmed.

I wish to reiterate, and elaborate on, something I said in my previous post (the fact check): I have my longstanding positions on this dispute, but there are other contexts, such as the ongoing Epic Games app distribution antitrust cases, in which I believe I'm more balanced than others who would simply blame Google for all sorts of things. Google does many good things, and I actually supported Google's core positions on EU copyright reform last year (in blog posts and by speaking at a couple of demonstrations, including the largest one of all those anti-Article-13 demonstrations). Also, in 2014 I expressed positions during an Apple v. Samsung trial that were definitely closer to Google's than Apple's. In fact, Google paid for the lawyers who successfully defended Samsung against two of Apple's patents-in-suit. And even in connection with Oracle v. Google, I said I wanted Google to win cert, though I was hoping for SCOTUS affirmance unlike everyone else who supported Google's petition.

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FACT CHECK: Ten falsehoods and fallacies Google's lawyer told the Supreme Court about Oracle's Android-Java copyright case

I live-tweeted about the Google v. Oracle America oral argument before the Supreme Court, and about five minutes into the hearing I already felt that Google was likely to lose the copyrightability part. After all justices had indicated where they stood on that question, or what they were interested in, there was no more doubt to me that Oracle will win that part by a unanimous or near-unanimous decision--but "fair use" is harder to predict, with a remand to the Federal Circuit being a possibility. Yesterday I published the justices' copyrightability statements/questions and commented on them.

Timothy B. Lee, who opposes API copyrightability, wrote on Ars Technica that Google's Supreme Court faceoff with Oracle was a disaster for Google, and it appears the finger-pointing is already in full swing. Lots of law professors supported Google for ideological reasons and maybe because they were misled about the expressive and original nature of API declaring code. One of them, Cornell's James Grimmelmann, is quoted by Ars Technica as blaming Google's lead Supreme Court counsel, Thomas Goldstein, for having done "an abysmal job." I actually saw Mr. Goldstein at his best when he represented Qualcomm before a Ninth Circuit panel earlier this year, and I wouldn't attribute to his performance on Wednesday an outcome that can and actually must be explained with the spuriousness of Google's non-copyrightability argument. Of course, one could have tried to take a different angle on the issue, and Professor Grimmelmann would have preferred Mr. Goldstein to make a more coding-centric argument. Considering how the justices approached the subject, however, Mr. Goldstein's strategy might have been the better choice--just that declaring code is program code, and program code is copyrightable if it's original and expressive.

What I don't like, though, is how he played fast and loose with the facts and the procedural history of the case, especially in the "fair use" context. I heard him say a variety of things that flew in the face of what I knew about this dispute that I've been following for a decade, longer than any other. But without verifying this based on the documents I've downloaded since August 2010, particularly by fact-checking against the Joint Appendix that was submitted to the Supreme Court (Volume 1 (pages 1-341), Volume 2 (pages 342-725)), I didn't want to accuse him of lying before at least refreshing my recollection. The bottom line is that his representations to the top U.S. court lacked veracity, even to the extent that I think he owes the justices an apology.

In the following, I'll highlight ten misrepresentations, in increasing order of relevance to the "fair use" decision:

10. "No summary judgment"

In connection with the standard of review, Oracle told the court that most fair use determinations are made by judges on summary judgment. This case is one, however, in which fair use was put before a jury, but the Federal Circuit determined that judgment as a matter of law (JMOL) was warranted. Justice Gorsuch asked Mr. Goldstein the following question:

JUSTICE GORSUCH: Briefly, just to follow up on -- on that, Justice Sotomayor's question.

Mr. Stewart [Deputy Solicitor General of the United States] argued that if -- if we were to uphold the jury verdict or send it back on fair use, that we would be negatively impacting summary judgment practice and that most district courts take these questions up as a matter of law in summary judgment.

Justice Gorsuch raised a legitimate concern, one that may very well be shared at least by his conservative colleagues, and Google will need at least one conservative vote to win a remand. As part of his response, Mr. Goldstein said: "Oracle didn't move for summary judgment in this case."

What Mr. Goldstein overlooks are three inconvenient facts, any single one of which makes his statement less than truthful:

  • In the first Federal Circuit appeal (the one that resulted in a copyrightability holding and a remand of "fair use" for retrial), Oracle clearly argued that the fair use question should be resolved by the judges and not be put before a jury.

  • On remand, Oracle simply wasn't allowed by Judge William H. "I taught myself Java" Alsup to bring a motion for summary judgment. Here's the related excerpt from a February 2, 2016 hearing transcript:

    THE [DISTRICT] COURT: All right. Now I want to go to another thing. I -- that you all are bombarding me with. I don't intend to entertain summary-judgment motions and dispositive motions. Whose idea was that?

    We had the Federal Circuit order me to give you a trial. I'm going to give the trial. And if the evidence shows that Rule 50 [judgment as a matter of law, which comes at a later stage than summary judgment] should be granted at the end of the trial, okay. I can do that on the evidence at trial.

  • Google itself had moved for summary judgment on fair use back in 2011 (and lost, as I reported at the time).

9. "Java SE was not in smartphones"

Google argues that its use of the Java API declaring code is "transformative," which would weigh in favor of fair use (the first factor is "the purpose and character of the use"). But the problem is that transformative use in copyright is clearest when you create, for instance, a parody of something, or a cover version of a song 50 years later that has a completely different style. Google just claims that they took Java SE (SE means "Standard Edition") to smartphones, but that has simply been disproven over and over.

While Mr. Goldstein conceded that Google didn't really have a strong case for the court determining that what Google did was fair use, so his realistic best case is a remand based on the standard of appellate review of a jury verdict, he nevertheless repeated that long-debunked misrepresentation to the Supreme Court:

"[T]he jury was entitled to conclude based on the record evidence that this was an entirely new context, the Java SE was not usable in this particular -- in a smartphone"

What a disgrace.

Even Danger, Andy Rubin's company that subsequently created Android, used Java SE in the T-Mobile Sidekick smartphone. On page 370 of the Joint Appendix I found that old Rubin testimony about how they used Java SE:

Q. And that was the Sidekick/Hiptop that we talked about?

A. Yes.

Q. And you put Java to SE APIs in Hiptop; is that right?

A. Yes. We created our own implementation of the Java 2 SE APIs for Hiptop.

11 pages before that passage, Mr. Rubin confirmed that the Sidekick was a smartphone:

Q. And when you described that Sidekick phone as one of the—the first smartphone, I believe you said, is it the kind of smartphone that we’re familiar with today, the modern Android and iPhones?

A. More or less. I mean, it did a lot of the same functionality. It allowed you to surf the Web, get the full Web on a phone. It had a larger screen. The screen could be in landscape or portrait mode. It did instant messaging. It did email and things like that.

So what Mr. Goldstein said was plain wrong even with respect to Java SE, in the words of Android's founder--and Java SE was furthermore used to build the SavaJe platform, "a Java OS for advanced mobile phones" as Wikipedia says. But focusing on just Java SE is nonsensically narrow anyway. Many years back I explained that Java itself was used in BlackBerry and Nokia smartphones.

8. "Google expert said expressly Android has not superseded Java SE"

This here relates to the fourth fair use factor ("the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work"). Oracle's multi-billion-dollar damages claim is based on how Android displaced Java in the smartphone market, where it already had significant traction as explained before.

The breadth of the following statement by Mr. Goldstein toward the end of the hearing makes it a falsehood or even something much worse:

"Mr. Rosenkranz says that Android supplanted and superseded Java SE. Page JA 255. The market harm expert says expressly Android has not superseded Java SE."

Actually, when I looked up the passage of the Joint Appendix that Mr. Goldstein, it turned out that he misleadingly took the statement out of context. There is one answer by Google's market harm expert that says the following:

"It has not superseded – Android has not superseded Java SE."

But just a few lines above, the same Google expert referred to Java SE as a programming platform for only personal computers! Here's the full passage, and it belies Mr. Goldstein's sweeping claim:

Q. Can you please tell us what your understanding is.

A. Java SE is one of the Java applications programming platforms. And it’s the one that specifically was designed for desktop computers.

Q. Did you reach an opinion as to whether or not Android had superseded Java SE in the market? [emphasis added]

A. I have.

Q. Can you please tell the jury what that opinion is.

A. It has not superseded – Android has not superseded Java SE.

Q. Do you have reasons for reaching that opinion? If so can, you explain them?

[1898] A. Yes, I have two reasons. The first is that the two products are on very different devices. As I just mentioned, Java SE is on personal computers. Android, on the other hand, is on smartphones. [emphasis added]

The full context leaves no room for doubt. But here, again, there's something to add: literally minutes after that Google expert left the stand, Google made an announcement (do you believe that timing was pure coincidence?) that Android was going to compete with Java SE in the desktop computer market (see two 2016 blog posts of mine about this: 1, 2).

7. "API declaring code is barely creative"

In connection with the second fair use factor ("the nature of the copyrighted work"), Mr. Goldstein made the following statement that flatly contradicts even Google's own testimony:

"importantly, the fact that the original material here, the declarations, is barely creative"

As I already reported in 2011, Joshua Bloch, Google's chief Java engineer and top Java expert, testified the following:

Q. Would you say that designing APIs is a creative activity?

[objection to form, by Google lawyer]

THE WITNESS: Yes, absolutely.

So here you have Google's Supreme Court lawyer in 2020 saying the opposite of what Google's top in-house Java expert said nine years earlier when he testified under oath. Which one of the two do you believe? And which one of the two (if any) would you say is more likely to have told a lie than the other?

6. "new declarations only written in a new language"

Throughout this dispute Google has been trying to portray the APIs as being inextricably linked to the "free" Java programming language (the commands). Even the district court didn't buy that.

But Mr. Goldstein reiterated this on Wednesday:

"The computer scientists' brief at page 18, the Microsoft brief at 14, explain that both Apple and Microsoft, Oracle's examples, did re-implement prior interfaces. The reason that they didn't use these interfaces is they were using a different language, as if they were writing in French, rather than English."

As I noted yesterday, the Supreme Court is well aware of the fact that Apple and Microsoft (the latter even supporting Google here on fair use, though not on copyrightability) created smartphone operating systems without stealing anything from Oracle. Sure, Apple relied initially on Objective C and Microsoft on C# (the latter being pretty basically a Java clone, which I personally used a lot and like a great deal). But Oracle's Supreme Court brief notes that Spring and Log4J both wrote different declaring code for their own prewritten programs in the Java language that perform similar functions to those in Java SE.

5. "APIs never licensed separately from the Java language"

This is technically somewhat related to the previous item. And just as untruthful:

"The evidence at trial, for example JA 56, is the former CEO of Oracle saying that the APIs were never licensed or sold separately from the language, in contrast to his just base [?] assertion that IBM was paying for it."

Sun and Oracle offered the Specification license, which does exactly that, and large companies like IBM, Microsoft, SAP, Red Hat, and Oracle (before it acquired Sun) all took Specification licenses to the declaring code and then wrote their own implementing code. The Joint Appendix mentions all of that, mostly on pages 301-304 and 402-409. It's a fact that I fought against Oracle's acquisition of Sun, especially but not only in the EU, and Microsoft and SAP were co-complainants, which is also well-documented in the media. They wanted to prevent the deal from happening because of that very type of license!

Also, don't be misled: the "CEO of Oracle" here was Jonathan Schwartz, who despite his legal department telling him as early as 2007 that he should sue Google, never wanted to act. He was Sun's last CEO, he failed, and that's why Sun lost its independence. Oracle had to buy Sun because it was about to go bankrupt without an acquirer. Again, I know that subject well because I was a vocal opponent to the deal. I even organized and conducted a Wall Street analyst briefing (Westin on Times Square) in October 2009.

4. "no proof IBM paid for declaring code"

The passage I quoted under the previous subhead suggests that IBM was not paying for it. But there was undisputed trial testimony that IBM, and others, paid for a license to the declaring code without simultaneously licensing the implementing code (pages 301-304 and 402-410 of the Joint Appendix).

3. "Oracle seeking to block millions of apps"

Mr. Goldstein said:

"Here you have minimally creative declarations and they are being invoked to block the publication of millions of programs on an innovative smartphone platform."

The "minimally creative" part, which contradicts Google's own in-house Java expert's testimony, is totally incorrect anyway, but what's just as wrong is this allegation that the case is about blocking millions of apps in any way.

Oracle gives all programmers a free license to use Java SE to write apps that run on numerous licensed platform implementations of Java SE, including from Oracle's competitors. I'm sure I'd know if Oracle had ever sought any kind of relief against a single app or app developer just because they used the Java APIs. This case has nothing to do with app developers writing applications that run on Java SE. This case is about companies who build rival platforms. Oracle is simply seeking to require companies who seek to use Oracle’s investment to create a direct rival platform to take a license and agree to the compatibility requirements that benefit developers. All rival platform developers complied--until Google decided to just use the stuff without taking either an open-source or a commercial license, both of which Sun offered.

2. "industry expectations and practice"

Industry doesn't make the law. Congress does, courts interpret it. But courts do take the world outside into consideration, and Mr. Goldstein said the following:

"I don't think there is actual debate about the expectations of the industry. And they have nothing to do with licensed reuse of interfaces. The --there is a widespread consensus in the industry and among computer scientists that this has been the practice."

Concern about "upending" an industry practice is a potential factor in the Supreme Court's decision. But what Google's lawyer describes as "undisputed" was actually controverted by some, and even the district court disagreed with Google. It excluded Google's "industry custom" expert because he did not have the goods. He sought to testify about an industry custom of unlicensed copying without identifying any examples of unlicensed copying — relying instead on licensed copying (page 470). Having failed to establish the record for its argument in the most sympathetic court it ever faced in its history, Google tried to establish the point with amici curiae who similarly did not distinguish between licensed and unlicensed re-implementations and who conflated open-source use pursuant to a license with unlicensed use. At any rate, large software companies like SAS, Synopsys, and Mathworks along with the CEO of EMC (Joseph Tucci) and the former CEO and CTO of Sun Microsystems (Scott McNealy) all submitted amicus briefs refuting that there was such a thing as an industry-wide consensus of unlicensed copying being above board.

1. "benefit to developers"

It's almost funny how Google tries to paint a picture of being so altruistic that it really just had the best in mind for app developers ("reusing the minimally creative declarations allowed the developers to write millions of creative applications that are used by more than a billion people"--and "minimally creative" was addressed further above, but here the focus is on the alleged concern for developers).

It's not that I, as an app developer, am not grateful to both Apple (which didn't take anything from Oracle/Sun) and Google for the market opportunity they've created. My posts on the ongoing app store antitrust matters (such as 1 and 2) hopefully reflect my efforts to be a voice of reason in that context amid all the bashing of platform makers that I see elsewhere on the web.

But as a developer I depend on copyright and also want platform makers to respect it. Google could have benefited developers without Java, and if it wanted to do Java, it could simply have taken any of multiple licenses offered by Sun and Oracle and benefited developers. Google even rejected the free open-source license. All that Google would have had to do was agree that it and anyone who reused its code would also make their code available on such terms ("copyleft"). Google refused that quid pro quo because it concluded it would not be in its business interest (Joint Appendix, page 367). Helping programmers looks like a pretext to me, also in light of the various ways that Google protects its own APIs now and tries to lock app programmers into Android in various ways.

The bottom line is that Mr. Goldstein said a number of things that were misleading at best and mendacious at worst. He's impressive, but he may have gone too far in his vigorous efforts to secure the best possible outcome for his client Google.

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Thursday, October 8, 2020

Bench reading: what the Supreme Court justices said about APIs being copyrightable in yesterday's Oracle v. Google hearing

Other than a potential remand of the "fair use" question to the Federal Circuit, Google cannot realistically hope for anything positive to come out of yesterday's Supreme Court hearing in Google v. Oracle America (petitioner v. respondent as opposed to plaintiff v. defendant): the Android maker's non-copyrightability defense has a snow flake's chance in hell.

I wrote yesterday's triumphant post on the basis of having listened to the hearing on C-SPAN Radio (over the web). Now I'd like to go over what the justices said in the copyrightability context based on the transcript (PDF). I'll sort this by judge, in the order in which each judge first addressed this subject (seniority). And I'll then provide my interpretation.

Chief Justice Roberts

"Mr. Goldstein, let's say someone copies the headings in your -- your brief and they copy the organization in your brief, which sections you put first and how you organized them. Is your argument -- would your argument say that that's perfectly fine so long as they write their own text?"

This is consistent with how Oracle to the Federal Circuit years ago, with its Harry Potter analogy, which was just genius. The problem this posed to Google is that they'd either have to argue computer programs are different (which they tried yesterday, to no avail in the copyrightability context) or they'd have to take a very expansive view on what's not copyrightable.

"I understand your merger doctrine -- argument is different, but I -- I don't think that was the question I asked."

Google's counsel was being evasive again, so the Chief Justice said:

"Well, if you're talking about necessary to do so, and, again, you're force -- forcing me back to the merger -- to the merger doctrine, and that's -- that's fine, but the only reason that there's only one way to do it is because Sun and Oracle's product expression was -- was very successful. There were a lot of ways to do it when they did it. And the fact that everybody -- programmers really liked it and that's what everybody used, it seems a bit much to penalize them for that."

I love that part. First, the Chief Justice gave up on eliciting a real answer from Mr. Goldstein on the book analogy, which obviously made Google's argument look every bit as weak as it was. Second, the Chief Justice identified the fundamental flaw in Google's reference to the merger (of fact/function and expression) doctrine: while the doctrine applies to the situation at the time something is created, Google wants the court to time-travel and make Oracle, as Sun's acquirer, a victim of its own success with Java by saying that now the structure of those Java APIs is a method of operation and there is, therefore in Google's view, only one way to express them.

"I don't think it's a patent right. I mean, it's the -- it's their particular expression. And you want to -you say the only way for you to say what you want to say in the --the new material that you provide is to copy -- copy theirs. That's not a -- a patent. That's -- that's copyright."

At this point Mr. Goldstein had already lost (and as I wrote yesterday, he's great but Google has no non-copyrightability case by any stretch of the imagination) on three counts: he was evasive on the book analogy; his merger doctrine argument failed because he wants to retroactively apply it; and his claim that Oracle was trying to use copyrighted works to achieve a patent-like monopoly is nonsensical because it's about expression (about something that was written, not about an abstract functionality).

"[B]efore you get into fair use, you say that was the only way for you to do it. But, you know, cracking the safe may be the only way to get the money that you want, but that doesn't mean you can do it. I mean, if it's the only way, the way for you to get it is to get a license."

As came up several times in this ten-year litigation, the makers of Android were even negotiating a license, but decided to go ahead without one.

"Well, all right. I mean, you're --but what about the -the --the combination to the lock on the safe? Can you copy that just because somebody else has it and that's the only way to get in?"

Mr. Goldstein tried to give the "safe" analogy a spin for his purposes, but the Chief Justice didn't buy it that what Oracle was trying to achieve with its copyright assertion was a broad monopoly over how to do something.

"Mr. Rosenkranz, let's say you want to open a restaurant. You've got a great new chef. He's got great new dishes. And you say: Well, we've got to figure out what the menu should look like. You know, of course, you're going to have, you know, appetizers first, then entrees, and then desserts. Now you shouldn't have to worry about whether that organization is copyrighted.

"And I think Mr. Goldstein is saying that that's what's going on --on here. Every restaurant organizes its menu that way, and you don't want to discourage people from opening it because they're going to have to spend their own time trying to figure out what the menu should look like.

"Why isn't that exactly what Google is saying here?"

The Chief Justice used an analogy here that involves a much simpler and smaller structure than the Java APIs. That's why Oracle's counsel then noted the Java APIs "fill the blanks in 30,000 times over, and each item had its own description that no one else was using."

"Well, you say that they did have a choice; in other words, your work did not leave them with no -- no option. Well, what choice did they have without having to spend billions of dollars, which would be wasteful and impede the development of the high-tech business?"

This is now a policy question, and Oracle's response was that Microsoft and Apple (by coincidence, Mr. Rosenkranz has also been appellate counsel to them on various occasions) actually did just that, and that the idea of copyright law is that you do have to come up with your own creation. That applies to all fields of IP law, in fact: patent holders will also argue that someone should just work around (or take a license if available).

"Mr. Goldstein says the most efficient, the best way to do it, the way to keep programmers doing new things, rather than old things, is to use Java."

This question was so broad and general that it wasn't clear whether it was still about copyrightability or whether the Chief Justice had moved on to fair use, especially with the occurrence of the verb "to use." Oracle responded in both respects.

Justice Thomas

He hardly ever asked questions while Justice Scalia was alive. But since then I've heard him ask very interesting questions. He's a great thinker.

"Mr. Goldstein, you seem to rely quite a bit on Section 102. Why don't we rely on Section 101, which is more specific with respect to computer programs?"

This 101/102 distinction reminds me of the Federal Circuit hearing, where Oracle's counsel Joshua Rosenkranz explained, and the appeals court appeared to agree, that Section 101 is where copyrightability is decided, while Section 102 is more about what scope it then has. Interestingly, Mr. Goldstein didn't disagree. He just tried to thread the needle somehow with the help of the merger doctrine, which the Chief Justice had already shot down.

"So at what --at what point should we determine the merger, whether or not there is merger? When Oracle or Sun develops this program or when you decide to use it?"

Google's merger argument again fails because of their time travel type of proposition. But Mr. Goldstein tried nonetheless (as the alternative would have been to just concede the case away, though that would have been warranted) to defend the retroactive approach, and pointed to Baker v. Selden, a case I discussed in 2013. Justice Thomas then came up with an interesting analogy to Google's idea that someone should become the victim of their own success:

"You know, you could --someone could argue, though, that, look, if a -- a team -- if a team takes your best players, a football team, that the only way that those players could actually perform at a high level is if you give that team your playbook. I don't think anybody would say that is --is right."

Mr. Goldstein then tried to drive the point home that Oracle wanted a captive audience in terms of the programmers using Java or, as he called it, "prisoners" and not a "fan base." But that was again just him being evasive, as Justice Thomas obviously noted:

"Well, actually, my concern was having to turn over the playbook. But let's go to fair use briefly [...]"

So far, Mr. Goldstein still hadn't given a single answer in a strict sense to any of the questions that the Chief Justice and by now the most senior Associate Justice asked.

"Mr. Rosenkranz, in your brief, you seem to be arguing for more than the declaring code. If I'm right there, do we need to decide more than that?"

Oracle of course said it was just about the declaring code, but with declaring and implementing code not being practically distinguishable from a copyrightability point of view, it might have seemed that they were going beyond just declaring code.

Justice Breyer

When it comes to patents, he's relatively defendant-friendly. But patents and copyrights are different fields of IP law.

"Well, I have a question for each side that I'm trying to answer in my own mind. For you, I'd --I'd like to ask this: I write down at the computer, I have a computer in front of me, and I put java.lang.math.max(410), okay? And that calls up a certain program, which you did not copy, the one it calls up, which is setting the switches of a computer.

"Well, the thing I --the words I just spoke also call up a particular program, i.e., a set of computer switches that will get me to the program that does the --you know, that does a particular thing.

"Well, it's a computer program, isn't it? And you can copyright computer programs. And so what's the difference between java.lang, et cetera, which sets switches on the computer, and any other program that sets switches on the computer?"

This is a point I've been making for a long time: in order to deprive API-related code of copyrightability, one would have to generally narrow the scope of copyrightable works in the computer software context. As a programmer I know that the java.lang.math.max function requires two parameters to make sense, but that doesn't change anything about Justice Breyer having asked an excellent question that added value to what the Chief Justice and Justice Thomas had said.

"I bet there aren't -- just one way to do it. Why is there just one way to do it? If you spent enough time and you had the most brilliant computer programmers, don't you think they could devise a system of calling up the Java program, though it might be expensive to do and take a long time, that didn't use the word java.lang.math?"

This is also one of the fundamental truths in this case: Google alleges that something is like a real-world fact. It's like talking about the capital of the United States, and of course its name is Washington, so anybody talking about it has no choice about that name. You might be able to use a nickname, or a metonym. Well, you can say "D.C."--a synonym in most contexts. But the API code at issue here was freely defined.

During Oracle's argument, Justice Breyer said the following about copyrightability:

"All right. Please assume with me the following: Assume that the --what you read, the computer --computer programs which do something, after all, are copyrightable, but then it says methods of operation are not, whether they're computer programs or not.

"The problem for us is, is this more like Baker v. Selden, where they said the accounting is not, it's a method of operation? Or is it more like an ordinary computer program?

"All right. Now what I got out of reading through this very good briefing is, look, Java's people divided the universe of tasks, of which there are billions, in a certain way. All the things that tell the computer to do one of those things, we'll do. But that which tells the computer which to do, that's the declaration.

"Here is what it's like. It's like, as Judge Boudin said, the QWERTY keyboard. You didn't have to have a QWERTY keyboard on typewriters at the beginning, but, my God, if you let somebody have a copyright on that now, they would control all typewriters, which really has nothing to do with copyright.

"Or it's like switchboards on old-fashioned telephone systems. You could have done it in 1,000 ways. But, once you did it, all those operators across the world learned that system, and you don't want to give a copyright holder a monopoly of --hmm -telephone systems.

"Or it's like, to use the Chief Justice's example, a chef who figures out brilliant ways of mixing spices and then putting the spices for this and that in a certain order on a shelf, and then he writes something that tells you which shelf to go to and which shelf to pick out and which spice to pick out for which dish.

"Now all those things are somewhat ordinary programs, but they also are doing something. They're giving you an instruction as to how to call up those programs that reflect Java's organization.

"And at this point in time, it's really tough, just like the QWERTY keyboard, to go backwards, and very bad consequences will flow if you don't see that distinction. Okay?

"Long question, but that's what I got out of their method of operation argument. And I wanted you to say what you want about that."

Oracle's counsel was quick to point out that those analogies were more mechanical than the expressive Java API code. Anyway, the long statement Justice Breyer made suggests he understood the problem of Google making a retroactive-retrospective type of argument.

Justice Alito

"Mr. Goldstein, I -- I'm concerned that, under your argument, all computer code is at risk of losing protection under 102(b). How do you square your position with Congress's express intent to provide protection for computer codes?"

This concern is simply damning for Google. And it's consistent with the issue Justice Breyer raised.

"Well, there have been --a lot of questions already about the merger argument, but how do you respond to Oracle's argument that you're -you are arguing in a circle, that there is only one way to write a declaring code like Oracle did?"

If this case had been put before Justice Alito alone, it would have taken him only a few minutes to dispose of the non-copyrightability defense.

Justice Sotomayor

"Counsel, I --I -I go back to the essence of the question that I think my colleagues are asking, is how do you differentiate between declaring codes and implementing codes? Because you agree --you agree that you couldn't have copied their implementing code because there are multiple ways of doing that.

"But you fight the declaring codes because there are multiple ways of declaring as well. Apple has a different way of declaring the same functions. They spent the billions of dollars necessary. Presumably, you could have.

The fact that Apple built a smartphone operating system without doing this was a very strong one. It's just absurd that Google--trying to keep a totally meritless defense alive--then tried to distinguish iOS from Android because they used a different programming language.

"And yet, you spent so much time in your brief convincing me that implementing and declaring codes go together in this hand. They merge. How do we draw the line?"

We can see here that Justice Sotomayor is not willing to weaken copyright protection for computer programs in general only to suit Google's needs.

"May I --may I stop you right there? That's the nub of the problem, which is, what gives you the right to use their original work? What --how do you define 'method of operation' so that there's a clean line between that and when you have to create new code?

"Like an implementing code."

"My problem with your argument is, what's your definition of 'interoperability'? It seems one-directional. You seem to define it as the extent to which existing third-party applications can run on your platform, but not whether apps developed on your platform can run on systems that use Java SE. So it's one way."

Here I think Justice Sotomayor made a very important point (Google wanting to take, not give) but not in the most suitable context. She had actually, inadvertently, already started to talk about something that has no bearing on copyrightability but only on fair use.

"So could people now copy your --your --you now have developed many different packages and platforms and things like that. Can they copy yours now?"

Mr. Goldstein then replied in a way that would keep all options open for Google to sue anybody later, just trying to distinguish the cases. And judges easily see through that.

During Oracle's part, Justice Sotomayor focused on the potential impact of the decision:

"Counsel, at the -in your beginning statement, you had the sky falling if we ruled in favor of Google. The problem with that argument for me is that it seems that since 1992, and Justice Kagan mentioned the case, the Second Circuit case, a Ninth Circuit case, an Eleventh Circuit case, a First Circuit case, that a basic principle has developed in the case law, up until the Federal Circuit's decision.

"I know there was a Third Circuit decision earlier on in the 1980s. But the other circuits moved away from that. They and the entire computer world have not tried to analogize computer codes to other methods of expression because it's sui generis.

"They've looked at its functions, and they've said the API, the Application Programming Interface, of which the declaring code is a part, is not copyrightable. Implementing codes are.

"And on that understanding, industries have built up around applications that know they can --they can copy only what's necessary to run on the application, but they have to change everything else. That's what Google did here. That's why it took less than 1 percent of the Java code.

"So I guess that's the way the world has run in every other system, whether it's Apple's desktop or Amazon's web services, everybody knows that APIs are not --declaring codes are not copyrightable. Implementing codes are.

"So please explain to me why we should now upend what the industry has viewed as the copyrightable elements and has declared that some are methods of operation and some are expressions. Why should we change that understanding?"

When she refers to Google just taking less than 1% of the Java code, it sounds as if she conflated copyrightability and fair use, and maybe that was her intention, or maybe it just looks like it.

I believe some others who listened to that part have attached way too much important to the impact assessment. The law doesn't work that way. Yes, policy matters, but none of what Justice Sotomayor said in that long passage really shows a path under the law as it stands to arrive at Google's desired result, even if she desired it as well, which is not even a given (though she was relatively sympathetic to Google in some contexts).

Justice Kagan

"Mr. Goldstein, I have to confess to being a little bit surprised or confused about some of the arguments you're making this morning. And maybe it's just me and I don't understand it, but I'm hoping you'll explain it to me, because, when I read your briefs, I took you to be making a somewhat different argument, principally, than the one you're making today."

This impression of shifting-sand arguments or even self-contradiction is obviously a lawyer's nightmare.

"I took you to be saying that the declaring code is unprotected because it's a method of operation, that it's what allows Java programmers to operate the computer, and to be setting forth a pretty flat rule on that --of --of that kind.

"And --and I don't hear you saying that today. Instead, I hear you saying, you know, the real question is, are there multiple ways of doing the same thing?

"So are those different arguments? And which one are you making?"

Google's lawyer then wanted to have it both ways. And he tried to appeal to her by saying that his approach was "textualist."

"Excuse me. Sorry, Mr. Goldstein. But, if --if --if --if that's your test that you're focusing on today, is that essentially the test that comes out of the Second Circuit Altai case? Is there any difference between what you're saying today and --and --and what Altai says, which is essentially that we have to figure out how to separate out the expressive elements of something?"

This is the filtration approach, and her reference to this makes it a possibility that her understanding of copyrigh case law is particularly deep. The above was the most sophisticated question in my view as far as appellate case law on copyright is concerned. Other questions--asked by other justices--had other strengths, such as Justice Alito being super-efficient and Justice Thomas using interesting analogies.

"And if I could go back to something that I think the Chief Justice was asking about, I mean, suppose I'm --I'm --I'm sitting in a mathematics class and the professor says: Do a proof of --of --of something or other. And, you know, it turns out that 20 people in this mathematics class actually come up with more than one proof, and some are better than others, you know, some are elegant and some are less elegant.

"So there are more than one way of proving whatever proposition there is. How do we deal with that? I would think that that's pretty analogous to the situation here, that there are more than one way and Oracle happened to come up with a particularly elegant one."

Mr. Goldstein then tried to evade that question, and while Justice Kagan thanked her, I doubt he managed to convince her.

"Mr. Rosenkranz, as -as I understand it, there are two features of your declaring code that you think merit copyright. And I want to make sure I'm --I'm --I'm right on this first.

"The --the first feature, and this is pretty basic, is that we need some way of connecting a programmer's inputs, whatever they happen to be, some way of connecting those inputs to implementing code.

"And then the second feature is that there needs to be a way to organize those inputs, those calls, into various classes and packages.

"So one is like the trigger and one is the method of organization. Is that right? Is that the thing that you're saying merits copyright?"

Oracle clarified that it's about the declarations themselves, but also their structure, sequence, and organization.

"Okay. So let's start with that, the taxonomy, the structure, the organization, and we can, if we have time, get back to the other.

"I'll give you an example that's similar to one that the Chief Justice used, but I think you won't be --you won't be able to answer in quite the same way.

"Suppose I own a grocery store and I come up with a really terrific way of organizing all my fresh produce, all my fruits and vegetables, into these categories and sub-categories, very intuitive for the shopper. And this is not the standard way. So it's different from the Chief Justice's hypothetical in that way. It's novel. And it's great. And a rival grocery store, all rival grocery stores want to copy it.

"Do I have a copyright claim?"

Oracle then explained that not every structure, sequence, and organization is copyrightable. It depends on what the structure consists of.

"So why is it worlds different? I mean, it seems to me that there are all kinds of methods of organization in the world. You know, whether it's the QWERTY keyboard or whether it's the periodic table or whether the system of kingdoms and classes and phyla and so forth that animals are organized into.

"I mean, there are a thousand ways of organizing things, which the first person who developed them, you're saying, could have a copyright and then prevent anybody else from using them."

It then appeared Oracle answered the question satisfactorily, especially when reminding the judge that the material in question spans 600 pages in the appendix.

Justice Gorsuch

"Good morning, Mr. Goldstein. If --if I understand the conversation so far, you are moving past, rather rapidly, the --the primary argument in your brief that the code just simply isn't copyrightable.

"And I --I --I think that's probably a wise move given the fact that 101 says computer programs, including statements or instructions, in order to bring about a certain result, may be copyrighted.

"We might not think otherwise that it should be, but there it is. And, normally, the --the specific instruction there in 101 would govern the more general idea-expression dichotomy in 102. So am I right, that we can move past that rather rapidly?"

This question by Justice Gorsuch is an excellent statutory one. And when Mr. Goldstein said he actually argues the merger doctrine, the justice replied:

"So I take that as a yes. I'll be honest with you."

It wasn't good news for Mr. Goldstein, but such forthrightness is actually helpful.

"So, if we're moving straight on to the merger doctrine, there, I guess I'm stuck in a similar place as Justice Kagan, which is the argument strikes me very much me as I wish to share the facilities of a more successful rival because they've come up with a particularly elegant or efficient or successful or highly adopted solution in the marketplace, and --and ride on --on --on their innovation.

"What do we do about the --the fact that the other competitors, Apple, Microsoft, who I know is one of your amici, have, in fact, been able to come up with phones that work just fine without engaging in this kind of copying?"

Apple had been mentioned by Justice Sotomayor. Now Justice Gorsuch adds Microsoft. And in a way Justice Gorsuch created a synthesis of Justice Thomas's statutory approach and Justice Kagan's additional reference to case law.

"[I]sn't it pretty difficult to say that this is an essential facility-type problem when --when others have managed to --to innovate their way around it?"

Interestingly, Justice Gorsuch drew an analogy to antitrust law here. And my position has long been that the problem of access to copyrighted APIs should be solved through compulsory licensing on FRAND terms under an antitrust duty to deal.

"[I]f we're worried about ideas and expressions merging, and --and others have been able to accomplish the task without reliance on what --what you might claim to be the essential facility, where --where do we stand?"

Here, Justice Gorsuch checkmated Mr. Goldstein. Simple as that.

Justice Kavanaugh

"To the extent you're still making the method of operation argument, the other side and the solicitor general say that declaring code is a method of operation only in the same sense that computer programs as a whole are methods of operation and that, therefore, your method of operation argument would swallow the protection for computer programs.

"Your response to that?"

Again the concern I share over copyrighability not being the vehicle for distinguishing between declaring and implementing code.

"On your merger argument, one concern that has been raised already is the timing issue. Another concern that I want you to respond to is that it seems to define the relevant idea in terms of what you copy. You're not allowed to copy a song just because it's the only way to express that song.

"Why is that principle not at play here?"

The reference to a song not being free for the taking "because it's the only way to express that song" again exposes Google's approach of saying that something popular loses copyright protection. Mr. Goldstein then claimed they weren't "defining merger self-reflectively," but not in a convincing way.

"One of the points in some of the amicus briefs, and I want to compliment the briefing of the parties and all the amicus briefs, which have been enormously helpful, of the 83 computer scientists is that the sky will fall, in essence, if we rule against you in this case, threaten significant disruption.

"One question I had about that, though, is the Federal Circuit ruled in 2014, this Court denied cert in 2015 on the first issue. I'm not aware that the sky has fallen in the last five or six years with that ruling on the books.

"I know it's different if we rule here, but can you respond to that?"

I got the impression yesterday, as I also noted in my post right after the hearing, that this impact assessment type of question may play a major role in the discussion between the justices. And it's not just about copyrightability, where Google has no prayer, but even more relevant with respect to fair use, where there isn't a clear majority--however, fair use is so fact-specific (and in this case also a procedural matter--standard of review) that I don't think one needs to be concerned even if one agreed with Google on pretty much everything else. We're not talking about a general finding that APIs can never give rise to a fair use exception. It's about only this (extreme) case.

"And welcome back, Mr. Rosenkranz. I just want you to follow up on two of my colleagues' questions. First, any more you want to say about Justice Breyer's QWERTY keyboard question? And, second, Justice Sotomayor's question about settled expectations and --and I would add the 83 computer scientists' concern about threatening significant disruption. If you could just follow up on those two, and I have no further questions after that."

The way I understood this was that he just wanted to give Oracle's counsel the chance to complete whatever he wanted to say before, or to maybe optimize his argument.

Later, Justice Kavanaugh also gave the Deputy Solicitor General of the United States, Malcolm Stewart, a chance to talk about copyrightability:

"Good morning, Mr. Stewart. One question on merger doctrine and one question on method of operation.

"First, Google says in its reply brief that the dispositive undisputed fact in this case is that the declarations could not be written in any other way and still properly respond to the calls used by Java programmers.

"Are they wrong in saying that?"

And another chance:

"And the method of operation, Google says that the declarations are a method of operation because they are for the developers to use, while the implementing code instructs the computer.

"Your response to that?"

Those questions didn't change anything about my impression that the SCOTUS will either affirm the copyrightability finding unanimously or, less likely but possible, "only" near-unanimously.

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Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Supreme Court inclined to affirm Federal Circuit's copyrightability holding in Oracle v. Google, possibly unanimously--fair use may be remanded

Judge William H. Alsup of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California may go down in history as the only U.S. judge ever to have found that code related to application programming interfaces (APIs) is not copyrightable only because it's related to APIs. Or one of only two judges, should Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor dissent from what otherwise looks like a unanimous affirmance of the Federal Circuit's copyrightability holding. But even Justice Sotomayor is at best having second thoughts and far from being totally in the tank for Google on this part.

The points that Google's attorney, Thomas Goldstein, made on the copyrightability part were simply ridiculous (he's a fantastic lawyer--the problem is that Google has no non-copyrightability case), and in the first part, every one of the Justices asked questions that suggested a strong inclination to side with Oracle on this part.

There was pretty much a consensus that copyrightability is determined based on the situation when something is written, so the merger and method-of-operation exceptions don't apply if they're basically used as a defense to subsequent infringement (which is where fair use comes into play, but irrelevant to copyrightability). Therefore, Google has no path to victory on copyrightability. Game over in that regard.

I've been saying for about ten years--and this case just celebrated its tenth anniversary in August--that regardless of the Merger Doctrine or any other theory, API declaring code is simply code. The Supreme Court of the United States made it clear today, and will do so in writing. I already considered this outcome quite likely when I looked at a procedural order three months ago.

Words cannot express how much I look forward to the SCOTUS opinion after all of this time and absolutely unjustified attacks. Certain morons will get their comeuppance. But, to be very clear, there are some people who sided with Google on this question whom I respect a great deal. Those people know, or they can figure based on how respectfully I've interacted with them at all times, and because they didn't disparage me regardless of our disagreement on API copyrightability. By "morons" I only meant the unreasonable ones who blamed me in unacceptable ways against the backdrop of what was simply a massive legal error on the district judge's part.

Now, with respect to fair use, the problem is the standard of review because the "fair use" finding was a jury verdict.

Orrick's Joshua Rosenkranz argued that the Federal Circuit applied the "no reasonable jury could have found otherwise" standard, but that the correct standard would be de novo for the legal conclusions that a fair use determination involves.

My feeling is that the Supreme Court may find that the more deferential substantial evidence standard needs to be applied, and that in this case a majority of the justices may very well remand the case to the Federal Circuit. It's also possible that Oracle wins affirmance on "fair use" (especially since a split 4-4 decision would be sufficient for affirmance), but I doubt it. There appears to be some concern among the justices that with all the support Google got from amici curiae warning against the consequences of affirmance they somehow feel they shouldn't decide against what Google managed to present as industry practice and expectation.

Assuming that there is a remand of the "fair use" part, which I consider more likely than the other way round (though nowhere near as certain as affirmance of the copyrightability holding), the Federal Circuit would not be too likely to overrule the jury again. But it would then pick up where it left off last time, and Oracle had strong arguments (that also appeared to get traction with the appeals court) for a retrial. Judge Alsup made some pretrial decisions that unfairly disadvantaged Oracle.

I think is a clear case of unfair use, but I'm like ten times more interested in the copyrightability part, and so happy that this one is going to be clarified for good. I was the only one to openly welcome Google's petition for writ of certiorari despite hoping for affirmance. That's because I'm all about the issues, not about the parties. I wanted the copyrightability part to be resolved for good, and on a nationwide basis. A Federal Circuit decision applying Ninth Circuit law would have been of only limited value--it wouldn't have been binding on anyone, not even on the Federal Circuit itself. The highest court in the land is going to provide definitive clarification that API code is not going to be treated differently from a copyrightability point of view than other program code. It's about original creativity, stupid.

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Tuesday, July 7, 2020

Supreme Court affirmance of API copyrightability ever more likely--deference to jury (with respect to "fair use") is Google's last line of defense

For a few years I've limited my commentary on the Oracle v. Google Android-Java copyright case to procedural matters, without reiterating the reasons for which I believe the thousands of lines of Java API code asserted in that case are protected by copyright, and their use by Google was unfair. While I agree with Oracle on substance, I did publicly support Google's successful cert petition because I care about the key issues far more than about specific cases.

I'm going to continue to steer clear of arguing the issues. But I am still following the proceedings, and I have bad news for those who hated the Federal Circuit's copyrightability holding: with respect to copyrightability, it looks like Google is more likely than not to lose.

Due to the coronavirus crisis, oral argument was postponed on very short notice in mid-March, and later rescheduled for the next term (October 2020 at the earliest). Then, in early May, the following order was entered:

The parties are directed to file supplemental letter briefs addressing the appropriate standard of review for the second question presented, including but not limited to the implications of the Seventh Amendment, if any, on that standard. The briefs, not to exceed 10 pages, are to be filed simultaneously with the Clerk and served upon opposing counsel on or before 2 p.m., Friday, August 7, 2020.

This is about deference to the jury with respect to "fair use." The jury had found in Google's favor, so this is, per se, a potential Get Out of Jail Free card for Google, and apparently one that a group of law professors had raised in an amicus curiae brief. But it also means Google's non-copyrightability argument is struggling--or may already have failed definitively--to get traction with the top U.S. court for the second time in about six years.

That's simply because the second question ("fair use") won't be reached unless the first (copyrightability) is answered in the negative for Oracle. "Fair use" is a defense to infringement, and you can't infringe what isn't protected in the first place.

It's unclear how many justices proposed the request for supplemental briefing. It might have been only one, but it will have taken support from several others for this order to be entered. There is quite a possibility of multiple justices--potentially a majority--already having concluded that Google can't prevail on its non-copyrightability argument. The hearing was postponed on such short notice that many if not all of the justices are quite informed; at a minimum, their clerks had concluded their analysis at that stage.

If the Supreme Court answered the "fair use" question in Google's favor on the basis of jury deference, it might or might not discuss the standard for software copyrightability in detail. Whether the Federal Circuit's copyrightability holding would be affirmed explicitly or (by reaching "fair use") mostly implicitly, the copyrightability of API code would continue to be a reality in the United States.

In the same scenario (and I'm not suggesting that it's likely--the fact that the SCOTUS requests additional briefing doesn't mean it will necessarily agree with Google on jury deference), those opposing the protection of API code under copyright law wouldn't really make headway beyond this particular case (and even in that one, there'd simply be a remand to the Federal Circuit). It would be a procedural decision, centered around the standard of review, far short of agreeing with Google's "fair use" defense in its own right--and next time a different jury, ideally instructed by a different (more balanced) judge, might simply find otherwise. It wouldn't be precedential with respect to the substantive issue.

After Oracle won the first of two rounds in the Federal Circuit (with Orrick Herrington Sutcliffe's Joshua Rosenkranz as lead counsel), Google already requested certiorari, but the Supreme Court declined. That fact, combined with the May 4, 2020 order that implies copyrightability, suggests quite strongly that Google is facing an uphill battle in that regard.

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Saturday, June 30, 2018

Tech industry should lobby President Trump to nominate Senator Mike Lee to succeed Justice Kennedy on the Supreme Court

While Justice Anthony Kennedy has decided to retire from the Supreme Court after 30 years, his concurrence in eBay v. MercExchange, which stressed the unreasonableness of injunctive relief over a minor feature of a multifunctional product, will be a lasting legacy for which the tech sector (apart from patent trolls and companies that used to make or are still making devices, but largely or entirely relying on patent licensing revenue) will be forever grateful.

With this voice of reason in connection with patent enforcement leaving the Supreme Court, and with someone like Assistant Attorney General Makan Delrahim mislabeling as "the United States' policy" an unFRANDly agenda hostile to innovators focused on making actual products, the product-making, truly innovative majority of America's technology industry should make an effort to ensure that Justice Kennedy's successor will have a very balanced approach to patent enforcement. Where the rumored candidates stand on patent policy is usually unknown: you'd only have a clue if they had previously served on the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, or maybe if they had demonstrated a certain approach to patent cases at the trial stage (Judge Rodney Gilstrap--obviously not a candidate--is undoubtedly unbalanced). But that's rarely the case. For an example, no one really knew where Justice Gorsuch would stand, but he's a judge whom I would always trust that he'll go to extreme lengths to interpret the law correctly and reasonably (and to explain his reasoning in an intelligible way).

At this stage, there is a high-potential candidate we should rally behind: Senator Mike Lee (R-Utah).

He's on the President's shortlist of about two dozen potential nominees. Senator Ted Cruz (R-Tex.), himself often considered a potential Supreme Court nominee and probably one of the smartest jurists ever to hold elective office, vouches for his colleague's judicial conservatism. As does Mark Levin. Or the Hoover Institution's Adam White. And Senator Lee would gladly accept.

There are, however, two obstacles, apart from the fact that there are many other impressive people on the list of potential nominees. They aren't insurmountable, but they are significant. One is that Senator Mike Lee is not a sitting judge, unlike other recent nominees. The other issue is that he called on then-candidate Trump to withdraw before the general election when the "p***y-grabbing" recording came up. I must admit that even I, as a longstanding Trump supporter (even on this blog I voiced support for him in early 2016), was very concerned at the time that the recording would cost him too many female votes. Fortunately, he won anyway, and more and more people believe that he may go down in history as one of the most impactful presidents ever. But in that situation so close to the election, Senator Lee was skeptical, for understandable reasons.

I'm reasonably optimistic that President Trump will let bygones be bygones, and that he's not too much bound to this conventional thinking that only a sitting judge should be nominated. He's the first president never to have held political office or to have been a general.

Silicon Valley, and Microsoft and Amazon up north, and many other tech innovators across the United States, should support Senator Lee. The Supreme Court will continue to hear many patent cases in the coming years and beyond. Sooner or later, a FRAND case will reach the Supreme Court, given all that is going on with the controversy surrounding Qualcomm's business practices (most recently, an extremely interesting motion for an anti-enforcement injunction brought by consumers) or the patent dispute between the world's two leading Android device makers (Samsung v. Huawei), and numerous other issues and disputes. If Apple and then-Google's Motorola hadn't settled, even Judge Posner's historic FRAND decision could have gone all the way up to the top U.S. court.

There also is some potential for legal questions involving the United States International Trade Commission (USITC) and its sole remedy (equivalent to injunctive relief) reaching the Supreme Court in the not too distant future.

A hypothetical Justice Mike Lee would understand how to strike a reasonable balance between the interests of right holders and those of innovators who don't intend to infringe but simply implement industry standards or independently create products. He's knowledgeable on antitrust as well, and patent and antitrust matters overlap ever more often.

I've previously mentioned Senator Lee's advocacy of reasonableness in patent enforcement:

Please support him if you can.

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