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       S      Congressional                                              ______
               Research Service






Google v. Oracle: Supreme Court Rules for

Google in Landmark Software Copyright Case



May 10, 2021

On April 5, 2021, the Supreme Court issued its highly anticipated decision in Google LLC v. Oracle
America Inc., the culmination of a decade-long software copyright dispute between the two tech giants.
Resolving what observers have hailed as the copyright case of the century, the Court held in Google's
favor, finding that Google's copying of the declaring code of the Java SE application programming
interface (API) was a fair use and thus did not infringe Oracle's copyright in Java.
As a formal matter, the Court's holding was relatively narrow, concluding that Google's copying of
certain code from the Java API-what the Court characterized as reimplementation of a user
interface-was a fair use under the case-by-case balancing of the statutory fair use factors. As a
practical matter, however, the Court's decision is likely to have major significance for the software
industry, and may also potentially affect fair use for other copyrightable subject matter-such as art,
music, and television. This Sidebar reviews the basics of copyright in software; the dispute in Google v.
Oracle; the Court's decision; and potential effects for computer technology and other copyright-intensive
industries. It then briefly highlights some considerations for Congress.

Software Copyright Basics

Copyright law grants certain exclusive legal rights to authors of original creative works, such as books,
music, visual art, and architecture. Since 1980, the Copyright Act has explicitly protected computer
programs as a type of literary work. Applying legal principles originally crafted for books to computer
code has not always been a straightforward task, in part because computer programs are more functional
than most other copyrightable subject matter. Courts have thus long wrestled with the appropriate scope
of copyright protection in computer code. When the Supreme Court last heard a case involving software
copyright in the 1990s, it divided 4-4 and therefore issued no precedential decision.
Three key copyright doctrines affect the scope of copyright protection for computer code. The first is the
idea/expression dichotomy, codified in Section 102(b) of the Copyright Act, which states that copyright
protection does not extend to any idea, procedure, process, system, method of operation, concept,
principle, or discovery. This doctrine derives from the Supreme Court's 1880 decision in Baker v.
Selden, which held that the copyright in a book describing a system of accounting extended only to the

                                                                Congressional Research Service
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CRS Legal Sidebar
Prepared for Members and
Committees of Congress

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