November 7, 2014
Computer Scientists Ask Supreme Court to Rule APIs Can’t Be
Copyrighted
EFF Files Amicus Brief on Behalf of Tech Pioneers in Oracle v.
Google Court Battle
San Francisco - The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) filed a
brief with the Supreme Court of the United States today, arguing on
behalf of 77 computer scientists that the justices should review a
disastrous appellate court decision finding that application
programming interfaces (APIs) are copyrightable. That decision,
handed down by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in
May, up-ended decades of settled legal precedent and industry
practice.
Signatories to the brief include five Turing Award winners, four
National Medal of Technology winners, and numerous fellows of the
Association for Computing Machinery, IEEE, and the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences. The list also includes designers of computer
systems and programming languages such as AppleScript, AWK, C++,
Haskell, IBM S/360, Java, JavaScript, Lotus 1-2-3, MS-DOS, Python,
Scala, SmallTalk, TCP/IP, Unix, and Wiki.
"The Federal Circuit's decision was wrong and dangerous for
technological innovation," EFF Intellectual Property Director
Corynne McSherry said. "Excluding APIs from copyright protection has
been essential to the development of modern computers and the
Internet. The ruling is bad law, and bad policy."
[…]
Continua qui:
https://www.eff.org/press/releases/computer-scientists-ask-supreme-court-rule-apis-cant-be-copyrighted