Oracle Sues Google Over Java Use in Android OS

Glass_Joe 5 Tallied Votes 403 Views Share

Oracle announced Thursday evening (August 12) that they would be filing a lawsuit against Google, claiming that their Android phone software infringes upon patents and copyrights of their Java software, which they acquired when they purchased Sun Microsystems in January for $7.4 billion.

"In developing Android, Google knowingly, directly and repeatedly infringed Oracle's Java-related intellectual property. This lawsuit seeks appropriate remedies for their infringement," Oracle spokeswoman Karen Tillman said in an official statement.

The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court in San Francisco, alleges that Google “willfully and deliberately” infringed upon seven Java patents and has even gone so far as to hire former Sun Java engineers to help with the development of the Dalvik Java Virtual Machine, the backbone of the Android OS. Even though the Android OS depends on Java to run, it is anything but a carbon copy.

"From a developer's perspective, Dalvik looks like a Java Virtual Machine, but strictly speaking, Dalvik is not a JVM. Dalvik executes dex bytecode, not Java bytecode. And there are differences in the structure of Dalvik class files as compared to Java class files. Nevertheless, for all intents and purposes, building an Android application is really an exercise in building a peculiar sort of Java application,"PCWorld’s Rick Grehan previously reported when the Android was originally released in 2008.

Google released the following statement Friday (August 13) afternoon: “We are disappointed Oracle has chosen to attack both Google and the open-source Java community with this baseless lawsuit. The open-source Java community goes beyond any one corporation and works every day to make the web a better place. We will strongly defend open-source standards and will continue to work with the industry to develop the Android platform.”

Many reports see this as a way for Oracle to infiltrate Google’s recent success in the Android market, leading to a settlement which will see Java licensing giving them leverage on mobile markets and a free ticket to Royalty Town on the over 200,000 Android-powered phones selling daily.

mvmalderen commented: Nice article :) +8
Anyday commented: funny +1
Unbidden Ghost 0 Light Poster

Is it at all possible for Oracle to sue Google? I thought that java is under the Gnu Public license?

Even version two of the GPL would have been enough to render the sue baseless but in the newest version of the GPL where the technology under GPl actually gives up all patents how likely is it that Oracle will actually accomplish anything?

Glass_Joe 68 Junior Poster in Training

Exactly, my friend. This was why everyone was scoffing at the lawsuit when this news broke. How are they going to gain any ground when it's all essentially under the public license? Wherever there's a boatload of money to be made, there are lawsuits to follow, so I guess we shouldn't really be surprised anymore. They will almost certainly get nowhere and will just crawl back into their hole with lawyer fees through the roof.

ilovejava 0 Junior Poster in Training

wow this is shocking i cant belive oracle is doing this

dantinkakkar 19 Junior Poster

It's their way of earning a quick buck. Earlier, I expected an out-of-court settlement. Either Google was willing to do that after being intimidated by Oracle and Oracle took the extreme step in the want of some more cash, or Google didn't get intimidated by Oracle's legal notice and decided to give them a run for their money. Oracle Corporation has nothing to gain nothing from this case except for a bad reputation and severe defeat. They've no case since Java is free-to-use. I still firmly believe that Oracle is looking forward to nothing except a quick buck.

I guess that's why LibreOffice was launched. The OpenOffice.ORG developers feared that now Oracle has acquired SUN, their project would be scrapped. Nothing like that happened, except for the making of LibreOffice and Canonical removing OpenOffice.ORG from it's official distributions and replacing it LibreOffice; which is right, I think. We all would have been better off if SUN wouldn't have been acquired, after all, I guess.

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