Oracle Wins Verdict Against Google's Unfair Use Of Java Code

 | Mar 28, 2018 06:52AM ET

Oracle Corporation (NYSE:ORCL) filed a lawsuit, almost eight years statement which affirmed that it has won the lawsuit per Federal Circuit verdict.

Google was accused of copying 11,500 lines of Java code unfairly into its core Android OS. Per the court, as revealed by Associated Press, Google earned $42 billion till date from advertising revenues via Android, since the first Android-phone was marketed in 2008. When a free-to-use resource generates significant amount, it does raise eyebrows.

Brief History

Initially, both the parties were anticipated to settle claims. However, till 2012, the jury could not reach a consensus whether Google’s usage of APIs fell under the “fair use” clause “which permits copying under limited circumstances.”

Oracle’s damage expert relieved after being acquitted in May 2016 by the U.S. jury.

Still, Oracle remained adamant to its claim and appealed to the Federal Circuit court for a second trial.

What’s in the Offing?

Per Reuters, the case was sent to a U.S. judge for trial. The judge is handed over the task to determine the compensation that Oracle must receive from Alphabet’s unit.

Meanwhile, Google is performing calculations on its own and might challenge the verdict by appealing to the Supreme Court.

What Investors Need to Know

Shares of Oracle returned 2% in the past year, underperforming the S&P 500 index growth of 10.8%.