Hi
user
Admin Login:
Username:
Password:
Name:
Copyright Fair Use for Software APIs - In Light of Oracle v. Google
--client
debian
--show
debconf17
--room buzz 12412 --force
Next: 1 FAI demo session
show more...
Marks
Author(s):
Jeffrey Kaufman
Location
Buzz
Date
aug Mon 07
Days Raw Files
Start
18:00
First Raw Start
error-in-template
Duration
00:45:00
Offset
None
End
18:45
Last Raw End
Chapters
Total cuts_time
None min.
https://debconf17.debconf.org/talks/13/
raw-playlist
raw-mp4-playlist
encoded-files-playlist
mp4
svg
png
assets
release.pdf
Copyright_Fair_Use_for_Software_APIs_In_Light_of_Oracle_v_Google.json
logs
Admin:
episode
episode list
cut list
raw files day
marks day
marks day
image_files
State:
---------
borked
edit
encode
push to queue
post
richard
review 1
email
review 2
make public
tweet
to-miror
conf
done
Locked:
clear this to unlock
Locked by:
user/process that locked.
Start:
initially scheduled time from master, adjusted to match reality
Duration:
length in hh:mm:ss
Name:
Video Title (shows in video search results)
Emails:
email(s) of the presenter(s)
Released:
Unknown
Yes
No
has someone authorised pubication
Normalise:
Channelcopy:
m=mono, 01=copy left to right, 10=right to left, 00=ignore.
Thumbnail:
filename.png
Description:
Presented by: Jeffrey Kaufman, Open Source IP Counsel at Red Hat, Inc. and Adjunct Professor of Law at Thomas Jefferson School of Law. The current state of litigation between Oracle and Google provides a fascinating perspective on copyright fair use in the context of software APIs. This exciting 45 minute presentation will put the audience in the jury box to obtain an important and unique perspective on why the trial returned a unanimous verdict in favor of Google, essentially concluding that the copyright fair use doctrine allowed Google to use JAVA SE APIs in its implementation of Android. The presentation will conclude with a group discussion on potential impacts to the open source community. A brief background on the case will also be provided. This presentation is targeted towards software programmers, product managers, and program managers involved in software development and policy making. Anyone writing or using APIs would find this talk of interest. After attending this talk, the audience will have i) a clear understanding of the history and current state of the Oracle v. Google litigation, ii) clarification on why APIs may still be subject to copyright protection, and iii) when API use may be a 'fair use' under the law as a result of this litigation.
markdown
Comment:
production notes
Rf filename:
root is .../show/dv/location/, example: 2013-03-13/13:13:30.dv
Sequence:
get this:
check and save to add this
Veyepar
Video Eyeball Processor and Review