The decision of Judge William Alsup from the San Francisco District Court, rendered on September 27, 2016, passed unnoticed on Habré. He rejected the Oracle's petition to the court for reconsideration and refereeing based Google. Let me remind you that we are talking about using the Java implementation in Android and ChromeOS.
Oracle asked the court for a new review, among other reasons, arguing that Google hid information during the opening of its plans for integrating Android applications with Chrome OS running on computers and laptops, thus expanding the scope of violations beyond smartphones and tablets.
District Judge William Alsup last Tuesday denied Oracle a request for a new trial, which was to be the third in a dispute between the parties.
For reference:
ARC technology allows you to run Android applications in Chrome browser in isolated environments on computers and laptops. ARC is based on the Google Native Client, an enhanced POSIX compliant layer and the Pepper API, which emulates the Linux Android environment. This allows you to run Dalvik VM with almost no changes in the sandbox.
')
Also in December 2015, Google announced that Android N would switch the Java Runtime Environment from the Apache Harmony project to OpenJDK. Google stated that the shift was part of the effort to create a “common code base” between Java on Android and other platforms, and also allow the use of “popular” Java 8 features on the Android platform. Google later acknowledged that switching to OpenJDK would save the platform from the claims of Oracle.
The note is written on the basis of
“Oracle denied new trial in copyright with Google over Java” ,
pdf of the court decision and materials from Wikipedia.
PS Article is placed on Habré, as it relates to programming in Java and ARC technology.
There have already been publications about past processes:
Development → Judge Alsup knows how to program and instructs Oracle attorneyDevelopment → Oracle vs Google: reports from the frontManagement → Extreme Measures: Oracle threatens to defeat a six-year patent war by revealing Google’s sensational details