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by jhanschoo
2400 days ago
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What Oracle has won on is in the Structure, Sequence, and Organization in the API. The analogy with phone books is if someone else published a competing phone book, with the same positions for adverts and paid listings, and same distinctions between adverts and paid listings. The courts would find that such a phone book infringes as well. To make the analogy more accurate, many consumers have since come to be used to the layout of the old phone book, and do not want to switch because they have to retrain their habits to use the competitor book. Competitor book argues that the old phone book layout has merged with the idea of a phone book, or that the old layout is essential to the use of a phone book. The circuit court disagrees. |
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It's much more similar to recipes. Recipes, like programs, are functional; they exist to produce useful output. Two different recipes calling for different ingredients/proportions can be used to bake similar cakes. However, the two cakes are fundamentally different, and copying the ingredients/proportions/steps of a recipe might be the only way to produce a cake quite as tasty as the one from the recipe.
Recipes themselves are not copyrightable because of the idea-expression divide. Authors can express the recipe using different words/formatting, and that expression is copyrightable. Likewise, an API, including the SSO, is merely an idea and so can't be copyrighted, while the implementation is the expression of that idea and so can be copyrighted.
I think if we take the phone book analogy to it's logic conclusion, it must be okay for Google to use the API only if they change it to make it sufficiently non-interoperable, which seems highly unintuitive.