Oracle America, Inc. v. Google Inc. , 750 F.3d 1339 ( 2014 )


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  •   United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    GOOGLE INC.,
    Defendant-Cross-Appellant.
    ______________________
    2013-1021, -1022
    ______________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of California in No. 10-CV-3561, Judge
    William H. Alsup.
    ______________________
    Decided: May 9, 2014
    ______________________
    E. JOSHUA ROSENKRANZ, Orrick, Herrington & Sut-
    cliffe LLP, of New York, New York, argued for plaintiff-
    appellant. With him on the brief were MARK S. DAVIES,
    ANDREW D. SILVERMAN, KELLY M. DALEY; and ANNETTE L.
    HURST, GABRIEL M. RAMSEY, and ELIZABETH C. MCBRIDE,
    of San Francisco, California. Of counsel on the brief were
    DORIAN E. DALEY, DEBORAH K. MILLER, MATTHEW
    SARBORARIA, and ANDREW C. TEMKIN, Oracle America,
    Inc., of Redwood Shores, California; and DALE M.
    CENDALI, DIANA M. TORRES, SEAN B. FERNANDES, and
    JOSHUA L. SIMMONS, Kirkland & Ellis LLP, of New York,
    New York. Of counsel were SUSAN M. DAVIES, Kirkland &
    2                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    Ellis LLP, of New York, New York; MICHAEL A. JACOBS,
    Morrison & Foerster LLP, of San Francisco, California;
    and KENNETH A. KUWAYTI, of Palo Alto, California.
    ROBERT A. VAN NEST, Keker & Van Nest LLP, of San
    Francisco, California, argued for defendant-cross-
    appellant. With him on the brief were CHRISTA M.
    ANDERSON, STEVEN A. HIRSCH, MICHAEL S. KWUN, and
    DANIEL E. JACKSON. Of counsel on the brief were IAN C.
    BALLON and HEATHER MEEKER, Greenberg Traurig, LLP,
    of East Palo Alto, California; RENNY HWANG, Google Inc.,
    of Mountain View, California; and DARYL L. JOSEFFER and
    BRUCE W. BABER, King & Spalding LLP, of Washington,
    DC.
    MARCIA B. PAUL, Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, of New
    York, New York, for amicus curiae Ralph Oman. With
    her on the brief were LACY H. KOONCE, III and DEBORAH
    A. ADLER.
    WILLIAM A. RUDY, Lathrop & Gage LLP, of Kansas
    City, Missouri, for amici curiae Picture Archive Council of
    America, Inc., et al. With him on the brief were CAROLE
    E. HANDLER and BRIANNA E. DAHLBERG, of Los Angeles,
    California.
    GREGORY G. GARRE, Latham & Watkins, LLP, of
    Washington, DC, for amici curiae Microsoft Corporation,
    et al. With him on the brief was LORI ALVINO MCGILL. Of
    counsel on the brief were PAUL T. DACIER, KRISHNENDU
    GUPTA, EMC Corporation, of Hopkinton, Massachusetts;
    and DOUGLAS LUFTMAN, NETAPP, Inc., of Sunnyvale,
    California.
    JARED BOBROW, Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP, of
    Redwood Shores, California, for amici curiae Eugene H.
    Spafford, Ph.D., et al. With him on the brief was AARON
    Y. HUANG.
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                      3
    MATTHEW S. HELLMAN, Jenner & Block LLP, of Wash-
    ington, DC, for amicus curiae BSA/The Software Alliance.
    With him on the brief was PAUL M. SMITH.
    STEVEN T. COTTREAU, Clifford Chance US LLP, of
    Washington, DC, for amici curiae, Scott McNealy, et al.
    MEREDITH JACOB, Program on Information Justice
    and Intellectual Property, American University, Washing-
    ton College of Law, of Washington, DC, for amici curiae
    Intellectual Property Law Professors.
    JULIE P. SAMUELS, Electronic Frontier Foundation, of
    San Francisco, California, for amici curiae Computer
    Scientists. With her on the brief was MICHAEL BARCLAY.
    Of counsel on the brief was JASON M. SCHULTZ, NYU
    Technology Law and Policy Clinic, NYU School of Law, of
    New York, New York.
    JONATHAN BAND, Jonathan Band PLLC, of Washing-
    ton, DC, filed a brief for amicus curiae Computer & Com-
    munications Industry Association. With him on the brief
    was MATTHEW SCHRUERS, Computer & Communications
    Industry Association, of Washington, DC.
    CHAD RUBACK, The Ruback Law Firm, of Dallas, Tex-
    as, filed a brief for amici curiae Rackspace US, Inc., et al.
    JENNIFER M. URBAN, Samuelson Law, Technology and
    Public Policy Clinic, U.C. Berkeley School of Law, of
    Berkeley, California for amici curiae Software Innovators,
    et al.
    ______________________
    Before O’MALLEY, PLAGER, and TARANTO, Circuit Judges.
    4                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    O’MALLEY, Circuit Judge.
    This copyright dispute involves 37 packages of com-
    puter source code. The parties have often referred to
    these groups of computer programs, individually or collec-
    tively, as “application programming interfaces,” or API
    packages, but it is their content, not their name, that
    matters. The predecessor of Oracle America, Inc. (“Ora-
    cle”) wrote these and other API packages in the Java
    programming language, and Oracle licenses them on
    various terms for others to use. Many software develop-
    ers use the Java language, as well as Oracle’s API pack-
    ages, to write applications (commonly referred to as
    “apps”) for desktop and laptop computers, tablets,
    smartphones, and other devices.
    Oracle filed suit against Google Inc. (“Google”) in the
    United States District Court for the Northern District of
    California, alleging that Google’s Android mobile operat-
    ing system infringed Oracle’s patents and copyrights. The
    jury found no patent infringement, and the patent claims
    are not at issue in this appeal. As to the copyright claims,
    the parties agreed that the jury would decide infringe-
    ment, fair use, and whether any copying was de minimis,
    while the district judge would decide copyrightability and
    Google’s equitable defenses. The jury found that Google
    infringed Oracle’s copyrights in the 37 Java packages and
    a specific computer routine called “rangeCheck,” but
    returned a noninfringement verdict as to eight decompiled
    security files. The jury deadlocked on Google’s fair use
    defense.
    After the jury verdict, the district court denied Ora-
    cle’s motion for judgment as a matter of law (“JMOL”)
    regarding fair use as well as Google’s motion for JMOL
    with respect to the rangeCheck files. Order on Motions
    for Judgment as a Matter of Law, Oracle Am., Inc. v.
    Google Inc., No. 3:10-cv-3561 (N.D. Cal. May 10, 2012),
    ECF No. 1119. Oracle also moved for JMOL of infringe-
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                      5
    ment with respect to the eight decompiled security files.
    In granting that motion, the court found that: (1) Google
    admitted to copying the eight files; and (2) no reasonable
    jury could find that the copying was de minimis. Oracle
    Am., Inc. v. Google Inc., No. C 10-3561, 2012 U.S. Dist.
    LEXIS 66417 (N.D. Cal. May 11, 2012) (“Order Granting
    JMOL on Decompiled Files”).
    Shortly thereafter, the district court issued its deci-
    sion on copyrightability, finding that the replicated ele-
    ments of the 37 API packages—including the declaring
    code and the structure, sequence, and organization—were
    not subject to copyright protection. Oracle Am., Inc. v.
    Google Inc., 
    872 F. Supp. 2d 974
    (N.D. Cal. 2012) (“Copy-
    rightability Decision”). Accordingly, the district court
    entered final judgment in favor of Google on Oracle’s
    copyright infringement claims, except with respect to the
    rangeCheck code and the eight decompiled files. Final
    Judgment, Oracle Am., Inc. v. Google Inc., No. 3:10-cv-
    3561 (N.D. Cal. June 20, 2012), ECF No. 1211. Oracle
    appeals from the portion of the final judgment entered
    against it, and Google cross-appeals from the portion of
    that same judgment entered in favor of Oracle as to the
    rangeCheck code and eight decompiled files.
    Because we conclude that the declaring code and the
    structure, sequence, and organization of the API packages
    are entitled to copyright protection, we reverse the district
    court’s copyrightability determination with instructions to
    reinstate the jury’s infringement finding as to the 37 Java
    packages. Because the jury deadlocked on fair use, we
    remand for further consideration of Google’s fair use
    defense in light of this decision. With respect to Google’s
    cross-appeal, we affirm the district court’s decisions:
    (1) granting Oracle’s motion for JMOL as to the eight
    decompiled Java files that Google copied into Android;
    and (2) denying Google’s motion for JMOL with respect to
    the rangeCheck function. Accordingly, we affirm-in-part,
    reverse-in-part, and remand for further proceedings.
    6                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    BACKGROUND
    A. The Technology
    Sun Microsystems, Inc. (“Sun”) developed the Java
    “platform” for computer programming and released it in
    1996. 1 The aim was to relieve programmers from the
    burden of writing different versions of their computer
    programs for different operating systems or devices. “The
    Java platform, through the use of a virtual machine,
    enable[d] software developers to write programs that
    [we]re able to run on different types of computer hard-
    ware without having to rewrite them for each different
    type.” Copyrightability 
    Decision, 872 F. Supp. 2d at 977
    .
    With Java, a software programmer could “write once, run
    anywhere.”
    The Java virtual machine (“JVM”) plays a central role
    in the overall Java platform. The Java programming
    language itself—which includes words, symbols, and
    other units, together with syntax rules for using them to
    create instructions—is the language in which a Java
    programmer writes source code, the version of a program
    that is “in a human-readable language.” 
    Id. For the
    instructions to be executed, they must be converted (or
    compiled) into binary machine code (object code) consist-
    ing of 0s and 1s understandable by the particular compu-
    ting device. In the Java system, “source code is first
    converted into ‘bytecode,’ an intermediate form, before it
    is then converted into binary machine code by the Java
    virtual machine” that has been designed for that device.
    
    Id. The Java
    platform includes the “Java development kit
    (JDK), javac compiler, tools and utilities, runtime pro-
    grams, class libraries (API packages), and the Java virtu-
    al machine.” 
    Id. at 977
    n.2.
    1   Oracle acquired Sun in 2010.
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                      7
    Sun wrote a number of ready-to-use Java programs to
    perform common computer functions and organized those
    programs into groups it called “packages.” These packag-
    es, which are the application programming interfaces at
    issue in this appeal, allow programmers to use the pre-
    written code to build certain functions into their own
    programs, rather than write their own code to perform
    those functions from scratch. They are shortcuts. Sun
    called the code for a specific operation (function) a “meth-
    od.” It defined “classes” so that each class consists of
    specified methods plus variables and other elements on
    which the methods operate. To organize the classes for
    users, then, it grouped classes (along with certain related
    “interfaces”) into “packages.” See 
    id. at 982
    (describing
    organization: “[e]ach package [i]s broken into classes and
    those in turn [are] broken into methods”). The parties
    have not disputed the district court’s analogy: Oracle’s
    collection of API packages is like a library, each package
    is like a bookshelf in the library, each class is like a book
    on the shelf, and each method is like a how-to chapter in a
    book. 
    Id. at 977
    .
    The original Java Standard Edition Platform (“Java
    SE”) included “eight packages of pre-written programs.”
    
    Id. at 982.
    The district court found, and Oracle concedes
    to some extent, that three of those packages—java.lang,
    java.io, and java.util—were “core” packages, meaning that
    programmers using the Java language had to use them
    “in order to make any worthwhile use of the language.”
    
    Id. By 2008,
    the Java platform had more than 6,000
    methods making up more than 600 classes grouped into
    166 API packages. There are 37 Java API packages at
    issue in this appeal, three of which are the core packages
    identified by the district court. 2 These packages contain
    2  The 37 API packages involved in this appeal are:
    java.awt.font, java.beans,   java.io,  java.lang,   ja-
    8                        ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    thousands of individual elements, including classes,
    subclasses, methods, and interfaces.
    Every package consists of two types of source code—
    what the parties call (1) declaring code; and
    (2) implementing code. Declaring code is the expression
    that identifies the prewritten function and is sometimes
    referred to as the “declaration” or “header.” As the dis-
    trict court explained, the “main point is that this header
    line of code introduces the method body and specifies very
    precisely the inputs, name and other functionality.” 
    Id. at 979-80.
    The expressions used by the programmer from
    the declaring code command the computer to execute the
    associated implementing code, which gives the computer
    the step-by-step instructions for carrying out the declared
    function.
    To use the district court’s example, one of the Java
    API packages at issue is “java.lang.” Within that package
    is a class called “math,” and within “math” there are
    several methods, including one that is designed to find the
    larger of two numbers: “max.” The declaration for the
    “max” method, as defined for integers, is: “public static int
    max(int x, int y),” where the word “public” means that the
    method is generally accessible, “static” means that no
    va.lang.annotation, java.lang.ref, java.lang.reflect, ja-
    va.net, java.nio, java.nio.channels, java.nio.channels.spi,
    java.nio.charset, java.nio.charset.spi, java.security, ja-
    va.security.acl, java.security.cert, java.security.interfaces,
    java.security.spec, java.sql, java.text, java.util, ja-
    va.util.jar,    java.util.logging,      java.util.prefs,    ja-
    va.util.regex,          java.util.zip,            javax.crypto,
    javax.crypto.interfaces,      javax.crypto.spec,     javax.net,
    javax.net.ssl,             javax.security.auth,             ja-
    vax.security.auth.callback,         javax.security.auth.login,
    javax.security.auth.x500, javax.security.cert, and ja-
    vax.sql.
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                      9
    specific instance of the class is needed to call the method,
    the first “int” indicates that the method returns an inte-
    ger, and “int x” and “int y” are the two numbers (inputs)
    being compared. Copyrightability Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 980-82. A programmer calls the “max” method by
    typing the name of the method stated in the declaring
    code and providing unique inputs for the variables “x” and
    “y.” The expressions used command the computer to
    execute the implementing code that carries out the opera-
    tion of returning the larger number.
    Although Oracle owns the copyright on Java SE and
    the API packages, it offers three different licenses to those
    who want to make use of them. The first is the General
    Public License, which is free of charge and provides that
    the licensee can use the packages—both the declaring and
    implementing code—but must “contribute back” its inno-
    vations to the public. This arrangement is referred to as
    an “open source” license. The second option is the Specifi-
    cation License, which provides that the licensee can use
    the declaring code and organization of Oracle’s API pack-
    ages but must write its own implementing code. The
    third option is the Commercial License, which is for
    businesses that “want to use and customize the full Java
    code in their commercial products and keep their code
    secret.” Appellant Br. 14. Oracle offers the Commercial
    License in exchange for royalties. To maintain Java’s
    “write once, run anywhere” motto, the Specification and
    Commercial Licenses require that the licensees’ programs
    pass certain tests to ensure compatibility with the Java
    platform.
    The testimony at trial also revealed that Sun was li-
    censing a derivative version of the Java platform for use
    on mobile devices: the Java Micro Edition (“Java ME”).
    Oracle licensed Java ME for use on feature phones and
    smartphones. Sun/Oracle has never successfully devel-
    oped its own smartphone platform using Java.
    10                     ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    B. Google’s Accused Product: Android
    The accused product is Android, a software platform
    that was designed for mobile devices and competes with
    Java in that market. Google acquired Android, Inc. in
    2005 as part of a plan to develop a smartphone platform.
    Later that same year, Google and Sun began discussing
    the possibility of Google “taking a license to use and to
    adapt the entire Java platform for mobile devices.” Copy-
    rightability Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 978. They also
    discussed a “possible co-development partnership deal
    with Sun under which Java technology would become an
    open-source part of the Android platform, adapted for
    mobile devices.” 
    Id. The parties
    negotiated for months
    but were unable to reach an agreement. The point of
    contention between the parties was Google’s refusal to
    make the implementation of its programs compatible with
    the Java virtual machine or interoperable with other Java
    programs. Because Sun/Oracle found that position to be
    anathema to the “write once, run anywhere” philosophy,
    it did not grant Google a license to use the Java API
    packages.
    When the parties’ negotiations reached an impasse,
    Google decided to use the Java programming language to
    design its own virtual machine—the Dalvik virtual ma-
    chine (“Dalvik VM”)—and “to write its own implementa-
    tions for the functions in the Java API that were key to
    mobile devices.” 
    Id. Google developed
    the Android plat-
    form, which grew to include 168 API packages—37 of
    which correspond to the Java API packages at issue in
    this appeal.
    With respect to the 37 packages at issue, “Google be-
    lieved Java application programmers would want to find
    the same 37 sets of functionalities in the new Android
    system callable by the same names as used in Java.” 
    Id. To achieve
    this result, Google copied the declaring source
    code from the 37 Java API packages verbatim, inserting
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                    11
    that code into parts of its Android software. In doing so,
    Google copied the elaborately organized taxonomy of all
    the names of methods, classes, interfaces, and packages—
    the “overall system of organized names—covering 37
    packages, with over six hundred classes, with over six
    thousand methods.” Copyrightability Decision, 872 F.
    Supp. 2d at 999. The parties and district court referred
    to this taxonomy of expressions as the “structure, se-
    quence, and organization” or “SSO” of the 37 packages. It
    is undisputed, however, that Google wrote its own imple-
    menting code, except with respect to: (1) the rangeCheck
    function, which consisted of nine lines of code; and
    (2) eight decompiled security files.
    As to rangeCheck, the court found that the Sun engi-
    neer who wrote it later worked for Google and contributed
    two files he created containing the rangeCheck function—
    “Timsort.java” and “ComparableTimsort”—to the Android
    platform. In doing so, the nine-line rangeCheck function
    was copied directly into Android. As to the eight decom-
    piled files, the district court found that they were copied
    and used as test files but “never found their way into
    Android or any handset.” 
    Id. at 983.
         Google released the Android platform in 2007, and the
    first Android phones went on sale the following year.
    Although it is undisputed that certain Android software
    contains copies of the 37 API packages’ declaring code at
    issue, neither the district court nor the parties specify in
    which programs those copies appear. Oracle indicated at
    oral argument, however, that all Android phones contain
    copies of the accused portions of the Android software.
    Oral Argument at 1:35, available at http://www.
    cafc.uscourts.gov/oral-argument-recordings/2013-1021/all.
    Android smartphones “rapidly grew in popularity and
    now comprise a large share of the United States market.”
    Copyrightability Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 978. Google
    provides the Android platform free of charge to
    smartphone manufacturers and receives revenue when
    12                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    customers use particular functions on the Android phone.
    Although Android uses the Java programming language,
    it is undisputed that Android is not generally Java com-
    patible. As Oracle explains, “Google ultimately designed
    Android to be incompatible with the Java platform, so
    that apps written for one will not work on the other.”
    Appellant Br. 29.
    C. Trial and Post-Trial Rulings
    Beginning on April 16, 2012, the district court and the
    jury—on parallel tracks—viewed documents and heard
    testimony from twenty-four witnesses on copyrightability,
    infringement, fair use, and Google’s other defenses.
    Because the parties agreed the district court would decide
    copyrightability, the court instructed the jury to assume
    that the structure, sequence, and organization of the 37
    API packages was copyrightable. And, the court informed
    the jury that Google conceded that it copied the declaring
    code used in the 37 packages verbatim. The court also
    instructed the jury that Google conceded copying the
    rangeCheck function and the eight decompiled security
    files, but that Google maintained that its use of those
    lines of code was de minimis. See Final Charge to the
    Jury (Phase One), Oracle Am., Inc. v. Google Inc., 3:10-cv-
    3561 (N.D. Cal. Apr. 30, 2012), ECF No. 1018 at 14 (“With
    respect to the infringement issues concerning the
    rangeCheck and other similar files, Google agrees that
    the accused lines of code and comments came from the
    copyrighted material but contends that the amounts
    involved were so negligible as to be de minimis and thus
    should be excused.”).
    On May 7, 2012, the jury returned a verdict finding
    that Google infringed Oracle’s copyright in the 37 Java
    API packages and in the nine lines of rangeCheck code,
    but returned a noninfringement verdict as to eight de-
    compiled security files. The jury hung on Google’s fair use
    defense.
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                      13
    The parties filed a number of post-trial motions, most
    of which were ultimately denied. In relevant part, the
    district court denied Oracle’s motion for JMOL regarding
    fair use and Google’s motion for JMOL as to the
    rangeCheck files. Order on Motions for Judgment as a
    Matter of Law, Oracle Am., Inc. v. Google Inc., No. 3:10-
    cv-3561 (N.D. Cal. May 10, 2012), ECF No. 1119. The
    district court granted Oracle’s motion for JMOL of in-
    fringement as to the eight decompiled files, however. In
    its order, the court explained that: (1) Google copied the
    files in their entirety; (2) the trial testimony revealed that
    the use of those files was “significant”; and (3) no reason-
    able jury could find the copying de minimis. Order Grant-
    ing JMOL on Decompiled Files, 
    2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66417
    , at *6.
    On May 31, 2012, the district court issued the prima-
    ry decision at issue in this appeal, finding that the repli-
    cated elements of the Java API packages—including the
    declarations and their structure, sequence, and organiza-
    tion—were not copyrightable. As to the declaring code,
    the court concluded that “there is only one way to write”
    it, and thus the “merger doctrine bars anyone from claim-
    ing exclusive copyright ownership of that expression.”
    Copyrightability Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 998. The
    court further found that the declaring code was not pro-
    tectable because “names and short phrases cannot be
    copyrighted.” 
    Id. As such,
    the court determined that
    “there can be no copyright violation in using the identical
    declarations.” 
    Id. As to
    the overall structure, sequence, and organiza-
    tion of the Java API packages, the court recognized that
    “nothing in the rules of the Java language . . . required
    that Google replicate the same groupings even if Google
    was free to replicate the same functionality.” 
    Id. at 999.
    Therefore, the court determined that “Oracle’s best argu-
    ment . . . is that while no single name is copyrightable,
    Java’s overall system of organized names—covering 37
    14                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    packages, with over six hundred classes, with over six
    thousand methods—is a ‘taxonomy’ and, therefore, copy-
    rightable.” 
    Id. Although it
    acknowledged that the overall structure of
    Oracle’s API packages is creative, original, and “resem-
    bles a taxonomy,” the district court found that it “is
    nevertheless a command structure, a system or method of
    operation—a long hierarchy of over six thousand com-
    mands to carry out pre-assigned functions”—that is not
    entitled to copyright protection under Section 102(b) of
    the Copyright Act. 
    Id. at 999-1000.
    In reaching this
    conclusion, the court emphasized that, “[o]f the 166 Java
    packages, 129 were not violated in any way.” 
    Id. at 1001.
    And, of the 37 Java API packages at issue, “97 percent of
    the Android lines were new from Google and the remain-
    ing three percent were freely replicable under the merger
    and names doctrines.” 
    Id. On these
    grounds, the court
    dismissed Oracle’s copyright claims, concluding that “the
    particular elements replicated by Google were free for all
    to use under the Copyright Act.” 
    Id. On June
    20, 2012, the district court entered final
    judgment in favor of Google and against Oracle on its
    claim for copyright infringement, except with respect to
    the rangeCheck function and the eight decompiled files.
    As to rangeCheck and the decompiled files, the court
    entered judgment for Oracle and against Google in the
    amount of zero dollars, per the parties’ stipulation. Final
    Judgment, Oracle Am., Inc. v. Google Inc., No. 3:10-cv-
    3561 (N.D. Cal. June 20, 2012), ECF No. 1211. Oracle
    timely appealed from the portion of the district court’s
    final judgment entered against it and Google timely cross-
    appealed with respect to rangeCheck and the eight de-
    compiled files.   Because this action included patent
    claims, we have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    § 1295(a)(1).
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                   15
    DISCUSSION
    I. ORACLE’S APPEAL
    It is undisputed that the Java programming language
    is open and free for anyone to use. Except to the limited
    extent noted below regarding three of the API packages, it
    is also undisputed that Google could have written its own
    API packages using the Java language. Google chose not
    to do that. Instead, it is undisputed that Google copied
    7,000 lines of declaring code and generally replicated the
    overall structure, sequence, and organization of Oracle’s
    37 Java API packages. The central question before us is
    whether these elements of the Java platform are entitled
    to copyright protection. The district court concluded that
    they are not, and Oracle challenges that determination on
    appeal. Oracle also argues that the district court should
    have dismissed Google’s fair use defense as a matter of
    law.
    According to Google, however, the district court cor-
    rectly determined that: (1) there was only one way to
    write the Java method declarations and remain “interop-
    erable” with Java; and (2) the organization and structure
    of the 37 Java API packages is a “command structure”
    excluded from copyright protection under Section 102(b).
    Google also argues that, if we reverse the district court’s
    copyrightability determination, we should direct the
    district court to retry its fair use defense.
    “When the questions on appeal involve law and prece-
    dent on subjects not exclusively assigned to the Federal
    Circuit, the court applies the law which would be applied
    by the regional circuit.” Atari Games Corp. v. Nintendo of
    Am., Inc., 
    897 F.2d 1572
    , 1575 (Fed. Cir. 1990). Copyright
    issues are not exclusively assigned to the Federal Circuit.
    See 28 U.S.C. § 1295. The parties agree that Ninth Cir-
    cuit law applies and that, in the Ninth Circuit, whether
    particular expression is protected by copyright law is
    16                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    “subject to de novo review.” Ets-Hokin v. Skyy Spirits,
    Inc., 
    225 F.3d 1068
    , 1073 (9th Cir. 2000). 3
    3   The Supreme Court has not addressed whether
    copyrightability is a pure question of law or a mixed
    question of law and fact, or whether, if it is a mixed
    question of law and fact, the factual components of that
    inquiry are for the court, rather than the jury. Relatedly,
    it has not decided the standard of review that applies on
    appeal. Ten years ago, before finding it unnecessary to
    decide whether copyrightability is a pure question of law
    or a mixed question of law and fact, the Seventh Circuit
    noted that it had “found only a handful of appellate cases
    addressing the issue, and they are split.” Gaiman v.
    McFarlane, 
    360 F.3d 644
    , 648 (7th Cir. 2004). And,
    panels of the Ninth Circuit have defined the respective
    roles of the jury and the court differently where questions
    of originality were at issue. Compare North Coast Indus.
    v. Jason Maxwell, Inc., 
    972 F.2d 1031
    , 1035 (9th Cir.
    1992), with 
    Ets-Hokin, 225 F.3d at 1073
    . More recently,
    several district courts within the Ninth Circuit have
    treated copyrightability as a question for only the court,
    regardless of whether it is a pure question of law. See
    Stern v. Does, No. 09-1986, 
    2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37735
    ,
    *7 (C.D. Cal. Feb. 10, 2011); Jonathan Browning, Inc. v.
    Venetian Casino Resort LLC, No. C 07-3983, 2009 U.S.
    Dist. LEXIS 57525, at *2 (N.D. Cal. June 19, 2009); see
    also Pivot Point Int’l, Inc. v. Charlene Prods., Inc., 932 F.
    Supp. 220, 225 (N.D. Ill. 1996) (Easterbrook, J.) (citing to
    Markman v. Westview Instruments, Inc., 
    517 U.S. 370
    (1996), and concluding that whether works are copyright-
    able is a question which the “jury has nothing to do
    with”). We need not address any of these questions,
    because the parties here agreed that the district court
    would decide copyrightability, and both largely agree that
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                     17
    We are mindful that the application of copyright law
    in the computer context is often a difficult task. See Lotus
    Dev. Corp. v. Borland Int’l, Inc., 
    49 F.3d 807
    , 820 (1st Cir.
    1995) (Boudin, J., concurring) (“Applying copyright law to
    computer programs is like assembling a jigsaw puzzle
    whose pieces do not quite fit.”). On this record, however,
    we find that the district court failed to distinguish be-
    tween the threshold question of what is copyrightable—
    which presents a low bar—and the scope of conduct that
    constitutes infringing activity. The court also erred by
    importing fair use principles, including interoperability
    concerns, into its copyrightability analysis.
    For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the de-
    claring code and the structure, sequence, and organiza-
    tion of the 37 Java API packages are entitled to copyright
    protection. Because there is an insufficient record as to
    the relevant fair use factors, we remand for further pro-
    ceedings on Google’s fair use defense.
    A. Copyrightability
    The Copyright Act provides protection to “original
    works of authorship fixed in any tangible medium of
    expression,” including “literary works.”          17 U.S.C.
    § 102(a). It is undisputed that computer programs—
    defined in the Copyright Act as “a set of statements or
    instructions to be used directly or indirectly in a computer
    in order to bring about a certain result,” 17 U.S.C.
    § 101—can be subject to copyright protection as “literary
    works.” See Atari Games Corp. v. Nintendo of Am., Inc.,
    
    975 F.2d 832
    , 838 (Fed. Cir. 1992) (“As literary works,
    copyright protection extends to computer programs.”).
    Indeed, the legislative history explains that “literary
    works” includes “computer programs to the extent that
    we may undertake a review of that determination de
    novo.
    18                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    they incorporate authorship in the programmer’s expres-
    sion of original ideas, as distinguished from the ideas
    themselves.” H.R. Rep. No. 1476, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 54,
    reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5659, 5667.
    By statute, a work must be “original” to qualify for
    copyright protection. 17 U.S.C. § 102(a). This “originality
    requirement is not particularly stringent,” however. Feist
    Publ’ns, Inc. v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co., 
    499 U.S. 340
    , 358
    (1991). “Original, as the term is used in copyright, means
    only that the work was independently created by the
    author (as opposed to copied from other works), and that
    it possesses at least some minimal degree of creativity.”
    
    Id. at 345.
        Copyright protection extends only to the expression of
    an idea—not to the underlying idea itself. Mazer v. Stein,
    
    347 U.S. 201
    , 217 (1954) (“Unlike a patent, a copyright
    gives no exclusive right to the art disclosed; protection is
    given only to the expression of the idea—not the idea
    itself.”). This distinction—commonly referred to as the
    “idea/expression dichotomy”—is codified in Section 102(b)
    of the Copyright Act, which provides:
    In no case does copyright protection for an origi-
    nal work of authorship extend to any idea, proce-
    dure, process, system, method of operation,
    concept, principle, or discovery, regardless of the
    form in which it is described, explained, illustrat-
    ed, or embodied in such work.
    17 U.S.C. § 102(b); see Golan v. Holder, 
    132 S. Ct. 873
    ,
    890 (2012) (“The idea/expression dichotomy is codified at
    17 U.S.C. § 102(b).”).
    The idea/expression dichotomy traces back to the Su-
    preme Court’s decision in Baker v. Selden, 
    101 U.S. 99
    ,
    101 (1879). In Baker, the plaintiff Selden wrote and
    obtained copyrights on a series of books setting out a new
    system of bookkeeping. 
    Id. at 100.
    The books included an
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                     19
    introductory essay explaining the system and blank forms
    with ruled lines and headings designed for use with that
    system. 
    Id. Baker published
    account books employing a
    system with similar forms, and Selden filed suit alleging
    copyright infringement. According to Selden, the “ruled
    lines and headings, given to illustrate the system, are a
    part of the book” and “no one can make or use similar
    ruled lines and headings, or ruled lines and headings
    made and arranged on substantially the same system,
    without violating the copyright.” 
    Id. at 101.
        The Supreme Court framed the issue on appeal in
    Baker as “whether the exclusive property in a system of
    book-keeping can be claimed, under the law of copyright,
    by means of a book in which that system is explained.”
    
    Id. In reversing
    the circuit court’s decision, the Court
    concluded that the “copyright of a book on book-keeping
    cannot secure the exclusive right to make, sell, and use
    account-books prepared upon the plan set forth in such
    book.” 
    Id. at 104.
    Likewise, the “copyright of a work on
    mathematical science cannot give to the author an exclu-
    sive right to the methods of operation which he pro-
    pounds.” 
    Id. at 103.
    The Court found that, although the
    copyright protects the way Selden “explained and de-
    scribed a peculiar system of book-keeping,” it does not
    prevent others from using the system described therein.
    
    Id. at 104.
    The Court further indicated that, if it is neces-
    sary to use the forms Selden included in his books to
    make use of the accounting system, that use would not
    amount to copyright infringement. See 
    id. (noting that
    the public has the right to use the account-books and that,
    “in using the art, the ruled lines and headings of accounts
    must necessarily be used as incident to it”).
    Courts routinely cite Baker as the source of several
    principles incorporated into Section 102(b) that relate to
    this appeal, including that: (1) copyright protection ex-
    tends only to expression, not to ideas, systems, or process-
    es; and (2) “those elements of a computer program that
    20                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    are necessarily incidental to its function are . . . unpro-
    tectable.” See Computer Assocs. Int’l v. Altai, 
    982 F.2d 693
    , 704-05 (2d Cir. 1992) (“Altai”) (discussing 
    Baker, 101 U.S. at 103-04
    ).
    It is well established that copyright protection can ex-
    tend to both literal and non-literal elements of a computer
    program. See 
    Altai, 982 F.2d at 702
    . The literal elements
    of a computer program are the source code and object
    code. See Johnson Controls, Inc. v. Phoenix Control Sys.,
    Inc., 
    886 F.2d 1173
    , 1175 (9th Cir. 1989). Courts have
    defined source code as “the spelled-out program com-
    mands that humans can read.” Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v.
    Static Control Components, Inc., 
    387 F.3d 522
    , 533 (6th
    Cir. 2004). Object code refers to “the binary language
    comprised of zeros and ones through which the computer
    directly receives its instructions.” 
    Altai, 982 F.2d at 698
    .
    Both source and object code “are consistently held pro-
    tected by a copyright on the program.” Johnson 
    Controls, 886 F.2d at 1175
    ; see also 
    Altai, 982 F.2d at 702
    (“It is
    now well settled that the literal elements of computer
    programs, i.e., their source and object codes, are the
    subject of copyright protection.”). Google nowhere dis-
    putes that premise. See, e.g., Oral Argument at 57:38.
    The non-literal components of a computer program in-
    clude, among other things, the program’s sequence, struc-
    ture, and organization, as well as the program’s user
    interface. Johnson 
    Controls, 886 F.2d at 1175
    . As dis-
    cussed below, whether the non-literal elements of a pro-
    gram “are protected depends on whether, on the
    particular facts of each case, the component in question
    qualifies as an expression of an idea, or an idea itself.” 
    Id. In this
    case, Oracle claims copyright protection with
    respect to both: (1) literal elements of its API packages—
    the 7,000 lines of declaring source code; and (2) non-literal
    elements—the structure, sequence, and organization of
    each of the 37 Java API packages.
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                     21
    The distinction between literal and non-literal aspects
    of a computer program is separate from the distinction
    between literal and non-literal copying. See 
    Altai, 982 F.2d at 701-02
    . “Literal” copying is verbatim copying of
    original expression. “Non-literal” copying is “paraphrased
    or loosely paraphrased rather than word for word.” Lotus
    Dev. Corp. v. Borland Int’l, 
    49 F.3d 807
    , 814 (1st Cir.
    1995). Here, Google concedes that it copied the declaring
    code verbatim. Oracle explains that the lines of declaring
    code “embody the structure of each [API] package, just as
    the chapter titles and topic sentences represent the struc-
    ture of a novel.” Appellant Br. 45. As Oracle explains,
    when Google copied the declaring code in these packages
    “it also copied the ‘sequence and organization’ of the
    packages (i.e., the three-dimensional structure with all
    the chutes and ladders)” employed by Sun/Oracle in the
    packages. Appellant Br. 27. Oracle also argues that the
    nonliteral elements of the API packages—the structure,
    sequence, and organization that led naturally to the
    implementing code Google created—are entitled to protec-
    tion. Oracle does not assert “literal” copying of the entire
    SSO, but, rather, that Google literally copied the declar-
    ing code and then paraphrased the remainder of the SSO
    by writing its own implementing code. It therefore as-
    serts non-literal copying with respect to the entirety of the
    SSO.
    At this stage, it is undisputed that the declaring code
    and the structure and organization of the Java API pack-
    ages are original. The testimony at trial revealed that
    designing the Java API packages was a creative process
    and that the Sun/Oracle developers had a vast range of
    options for the structure and organization. In its copy-
    rightability decision, the district court specifically found
    that the API packages are both creative and original, and
    Google concedes on appeal that the originality require-
    ments are met. See Copyrightability Decision, 872 F.
    Supp. 2d at 976 (“The overall name tree, of course, has
    22                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    creative elements . . . .”); 
    Id. at 999
    (“Yes, it is creative.
    Yes, it is original.”); Appellee Br. 5 (“Google does not
    dispute” the district court’s finding that “the Java API
    clears the low originality threshold.”). The court found,
    however, that neither the declaring code nor the SSO was
    entitled to copyright protection under the Copyright Act.
    Although the parties agree that Oracle’s API packages
    meet the originality requirement under Section 102(a),
    they disagree as to the proper interpretation and applica-
    tion of Section 102(b). For its part, Google suggests that
    there is a two-step copyrightability analysis, wherein
    Section 102(a) grants copyright protection to original
    works, while Section 102(b) takes it away if the work has
    a functional component. To the contrary, however, Con-
    gress emphasized that Section 102(b) “in no way enlarges
    or contracts the scope of copyright protection” and that its
    “purpose is to restate . . . that the basic dichotomy be-
    tween expression and idea remains unchanged.” 
    Feist, 499 U.S. at 356
    (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 1476, 94th Cong.,
    2d Sess. 54, reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5659, 5670).
    “Section 102(b) does not extinguish the protection accord-
    ed a particular expression of an idea merely because that
    expression is embodied in a method of operation.” Mitel,
    Inc. v. Iqtel, Inc., 
    124 F.3d 1366
    , 1372 (10th Cir. 1997).
    Section 102(a) and 102(b) are to be considered collectively
    so that certain expressions are subject to greater scrutiny.
    
    Id. In assessing
    copyrightability, the district court is
    required to ferret out apparent expressive aspects of a
    work and then separate protectable expression from
    “unprotectable ideas, facts, processes, and methods of
    operation.” See 
    Atari, 975 F.2d at 839
    .
    Of course, as with many things, in defining this task,
    the devil is in the details. Circuit courts have struggled
    with, and disagree over, the tests to be employed when
    attempting to draw the line between what is protectable
    expression and what is not. Compare Whelan Assocs., Inc.
    v. Jaslow Dental Lab., Inc., 
    797 F.2d 1222
    , 1236 (3d Cir.
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                     23
    1986) (everything not necessary to the purpose or function
    of a work is expression), with 
    Lotus, 49 F.3d at 815
    (methods of operation are means by which a user operates
    something and any words used to effectuate that opera-
    tion are unprotected expression). When assessing wheth-
    er the non-literal elements of a computer program
    constitute protectable expression, the Ninth Circuit has
    endorsed an “abstraction-filtration-comparison” test
    formulated by the Second Circuit and expressly adopted
    by several other circuits. Sega Enters. Ltd. v. Accolade,
    Inc., 
    977 F.2d 1510
    , 1525 (9th Cir. 1992) (“In our view, in
    light of the essentially utilitarian nature of computer
    programs, the Second Circuit’s approach is an appropriate
    one.”). This test rejects the notion that anything that
    performs a function is necessarily uncopyrightable. See
    
    Mitel, 124 F.3d at 1372
    (rejecting the Lotus court’s formu-
    lation, and concluding that, “although an element of a
    work may be characterized as a method of operation, that
    element may nevertheless contain expression that is
    eligible for copyright protection.”). And it also rejects as
    flawed the Whelan assumption that, once any separable
    idea can be identified in a computer program everything
    else must be protectable expression, on grounds that more
    than one idea may be embodied in any particular pro-
    gram. 
    Altai, 982 F.2d at 705-06
    .
    Thus, this test eschews bright line approaches and re-
    quires a more nuanced assessment of the particular
    program at issue in order to determine what expression is
    protectable and infringed. As the Second Circuit explains,
    this test has three steps. In the abstraction step, the
    court “first break[s] down the allegedly infringed program
    into its constituent structural parts.” 
    Id. at 706.
    In the
    filtration step, the court “sift[s] out all non-protectable
    material,” including ideas and “expression that is neces-
    sarily incidental to those ideas.” 
    Id. In the
    final step, the
    24                        ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    court compares the remaining creative expression with
    the allegedly infringing program. 4
    In the second step, the court is first to assess whether
    the expression is original to the programmer or author.
    
    Atari, 975 F.2d at 839
    . The court must then determine
    whether the particular inclusion of any level of abstrac-
    tion is dictated by considerations of efficiency, required by
    factors already external to the program itself, or taken
    from the public domain—all of which would render the
    expression unprotectable. 
    Id. These conclusions
    are to be
    informed by traditional copyright principles of originality,
    merger, and scenes a faire. See 
    Mitel, 124 F.3d at 1372
    (“Although this core of expression is eligible for copyright
    protection, it is subject to the rigors of filtration analysis
    which excludes from protection expression that is in the
    public domain, otherwise unoriginal, or subject to the
    doctrines of merger and scenes a faire.”).
    In all circuits, it is clear that the first step is part of
    the copyrightability analysis and that the third is an
    infringement question. It is at the second step of this
    analysis where the circuits are in less accord. Some treat
    all aspects of this second step as part of the copyrightabil-
    ity analysis, while others divide questions of originality
    from the other inquiries, treating the former as a question
    of copyrightability and the latter as part of the infringe-
    ment inquiry. Compare 
    Lexmark, 387 F.3d at 537-38
    4   Importantly, this full analysis only applies where
    a copyright owner alleges infringement of the non-literal
    aspects of its work. Where “admitted literal copying of a
    discrete, easily-conceptualized portion of a work” is at
    issue—as with Oracle’s declaring code—a court “need not
    perform a complete abstraction-filtration-comparison
    analysis” and may focus the protectability analysis on the
    filtration stage, with attendant reference to standard
    copyright principles. 
    Mitel, 124 F.3d at 1372
    -73.
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                   25
    (finding that the district court erred in assessing princi-
    ples of merger and scenes a faire in the infringement
    analysis, rather than as a component of copyrightability),
    with 
    Kregos, 937 F.2d at 705
    (noting that the Second
    Circuit has considered the merger doctrine “in determin-
    ing whether actionable infringement has occurred, rather
    than whether a copyright is valid”); see also 
    Lexmark, 387 F.3d at 557
    (Feikens, J., dissenting-in-part) (noting the
    circuit split and concluding that, where a court is as-
    sessing merger of an expression with a method of opera-
    tion, “I would find the merger doctrine can operate only as
    a defense to infringement in that context, and as such has
    no bearing on the question of copyrightability.”). We need
    not assess the wisdom of these respective views because
    there is no doubt on which side of this circuit split the
    Ninth Circuit falls.
    In the Ninth Circuit, while questions regarding origi-
    nality are considered questions of copyrightability, con-
    cepts of merger and scenes a faire are affirmative
    defenses to claims of infringement. 
    Ets-Hokin, 225 F.3d at 1082
    ; Satava v. Lowry, 
    323 F.3d 805
    , 810 n.3 (9th Cir.
    2003) (“The Ninth Circuit treats scenes a faire as a de-
    fense to infringement rather than as a barrier to copy-
    rightability.”). The Ninth Circuit has acknowledged that
    “there is some disagreement among courts as to whether
    these two doctrines figure into the issue of copyrightabil-
    ity or are more properly defenses to infringement.” Ets-
    
    Hokin, 225 F.3d at 1082
    (citations omitted). It, nonethe-
    less, has made clear that, in that circuit, these concepts
    are to be treated as defenses to infringement. Id. (citing
    
    Kregos, 937 F.2d at 705
    (holding that the merger doctrine
    relates to infringement, not copyrightability); Reed-Union
    Corp. v. Turtle Wax, Inc., 
    77 F.3d 909
    , 914 (7th Cir. 1996)
    (explaining why the doctrine of scenes a faire is separate
    from the validity of a copyright)).
    With these principles in mind, we turn to the trial
    court’s analysis and judgment and to Oracle’s objections
    26                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    thereto. While the trial court mentioned the abstraction-
    filtration-comparison test when describing the develop-
    ment of relevant law, it did not purport to actually apply
    that test. Instead, it moved directly to application of
    familiar principles of copyright law when assessing the
    copyrightability of the declaring code and interpreted
    Section 102(b) to preclude copyrightability for any func-
    tional element “essential for interoperability” “regardless
    of its form.” Copyrightability Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at
    997.
    Oracle asserts that all of the trial court’s conclusions
    regarding copyrightability are erroneous. Oracle argues
    that its Java API packages are entitled to protection
    under the Copyright Act because they are expressive and
    could have been written and organized in any number of
    ways to achieve the same functions. Specifically, Oracle
    argues that the district court erred when it: (1) concluded
    that each line of declaring code is uncopyrightable be-
    cause the idea and expression have merged; (2) found the
    declaring code uncopyrightable because it employs short
    phrases; (3) found all aspects of the SSO devoid of protec-
    tion as a “method of operation” under 17 U.S.C. § 102(b);
    and (4) invoked Google’s “interoperability” concerns in the
    copyrightability analysis. For the reasons explained
    below, we agree with Oracle on each point.
    1. Declaring Source Code
    First, Oracle argues that the district court erred in
    concluding that each line of declaring source code is
    completely unprotected under the merger and short
    phrases doctrines. Google responds that Oracle waived
    its right to assert copyrightability based on the 7,000 lines
    of declaring code by failing “to object to instructions and a
    verdict form that effectively eliminated that theory from
    the case.” Appellee Br. 67. Even if not waived, moreover,
    Google argues that, because there is only one way to write
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                     27
    the names and declarations, the merger doctrine bars
    copyright protection.
    We find that Oracle did not waive arguments based
    on Google’s literal copying of the declaring code. Prior to
    trial, both parties informed the court that Oracle’s copy-
    right infringement claims included the declarations of the
    API elements in the Android class library source code.
    See Oracle’s Statement of Issues Regarding Copyright,
    Oracle Am., Inc. v. Google Inc., No. 3:10-cv-3561 (N.D.
    Cal. Apr. 12, 2012), ECF No. 899-1, at 3 (Oracle accuses
    the “declarations of the API elements in the Android class
    library source code and object code that implements the
    37 API packages” of copyright infringement.); see also
    Google’s Proposed Statement of Issues Regarding Copy-
    right, Oracle Am., Inc. v. Google Inc., No. 3:10-cv-3561
    (N.D. Cal. Apr. 12, 2012), ECF No. 901, at 2 (Oracle
    accuses the “declarations of the API elements in Android
    class library source code and object code that implements
    the 37 API packages.”).
    While Google is correct that the jury instructions and
    verdict form focused on the structure and organization of
    the packages, we agree with Oracle that there was no
    need for the jury to address copying of the declaring code
    because Google conceded that it copied it verbatim.
    Indeed, the district court specifically instructed the jury
    that “Google agrees that it uses the same names and
    declarations” in Android. Final Charge to the Jury at 10.
    That the district court addressed the declaring code in
    its post-jury verdict copyrightability decision further
    confirms that the verbatim copying of declaring code
    remained in the case. The court explained that the “iden-
    tical lines” that Google copied into Android “are those
    lines that specify the names, parameters and functionali-
    ty of the methods and classes, lines called ‘declarations’ or
    ‘headers.’” Copyrightability Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at
    979. The court specifically found that the declaring code
    28                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    was not entitled to copyright protection under the merger
    and short phrases doctrines. We address each in turn.
    a. Merger
    The merger doctrine functions as an exception to the
    idea/expression dichotomy. It provides that, when there
    are a limited number of ways to express an idea, the idea
    is said to “merge” with its expression, and the expression
    becomes unprotected. 
    Altai, 982 F.2d at 707-08
    . As
    noted, the Ninth Circuit treats this concept as an affirma-
    tive defense to infringement. 
    Ets-Hokin, 225 F.3d at 1082
    . Accordingly, it appears that the district court’s
    merger analysis is irrelevant to the question of whether
    Oracle’s API packages are copyrightable in the first
    instance. Regardless of when the analysis occurs, we
    conclude that merger does not apply on the record before
    us.
    Under the merger doctrine, a court will not protect a
    copyrighted work from infringement if the idea contained
    therein can be expressed in only one way. Satava v.
    Lowry, 
    323 F.3d 805
    , 812 n.5 (9th Cir. 2003). For com-
    puter programs, “this means that when specific [parts of
    the code], even though previously copyrighted, are the
    only and essential means of accomplishing a given task,
    their later use by another will not amount to infringe-
    ment.” 
    Altai, 982 F.2d at 708
    (citation omitted). We have
    recognized, however, applying Ninth Circuit law, that the
    “unique arrangement of computer program expression . . .
    does not merge with the process so long as alternate
    expressions are available.” 
    Atari, 975 F.2d at 840
    .
    In Atari, for example, Nintendo designed a program—
    the 10NES—to prevent its video game system from ac-
    cepting unauthorized game 
    cartridges. 975 F.2d at 836
    .
    Nintendo “chose arbitrary programming instructions and
    arranged them in a unique sequence to create a purely
    arbitrary data stream” which “serves as the key to unlock
    the NES.” 
    Id. at 840.
    Because Nintendo produced expert
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                     29
    testimony “showing a multitude of different ways to
    generate a data stream which unlocks the NES console,”
    we concluded that Nintendo’s specific choice of code did
    not merge with the process. 
    Id. Here, the
    district court found that, “no matter how
    creative or imaginative a Java method specification may
    be, the entire world is entitled to use the same method
    specification (inputs, outputs, parameters) so long as the
    line-by-line implementations are different.” Copyrighta-
    bility Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 998. In its analysis, the
    court identified the method declaration as the idea and
    found that the implementation is the expression. 
    Id. (“The method
    specification is the idea. The method im-
    plementation is the expression. No one may monopolize
    the idea.”) (emphases in original). The court explained
    that, under the rules of Java, a programmer must use the
    identical “declaration or method header lines” to “declare
    a method specifying the same functionality.” 
    Id. at 976.
    Because the district court found that there was only one
    way to write the declaring code for each of the Java pack-
    ages, it concluded that “the merger doctrine bars anyone
    from claiming exclusive copyright ownership” of it. 
    Id. at 998.
    Accordingly, the court held there could be “no copy-
    right violation in using the identical declarations.” 
    Id. Google agrees
    with the district court that the imple-
    menting code is the expression entitled to protection—not
    the declaring code. Indeed, at oral argument, counsel for
    Google explained that, “it is not our position that none of
    Java is copyrightable. Obviously, Google spent two and a
    half years . . . to write from scratch all of the implement-
    ing code.” Oral Argument at 33:16. 5 Because it is undis-
    5  It is undisputed that Microsoft and Apple devel-
    oped mobile operating systems from scratch, using their
    own array of software packages. When asked whether
    Google could also copy all of Microsoft or Apple’s declaring
    30                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    puted that Google wrote its own implementing code, the
    copyrightability of the precise language of that code is not
    at issue on appeal. Instead, our focus is on the declaring
    code and structure of the API packages.
    On appeal, Oracle argues that the district court:
    (1) misapplied the merger doctrine; and (2) failed to focus
    its analysis on the options available to the original au-
    thor. We agree with Oracle on both points. First, we
    agree that merger cannot bar copyright protection for any
    lines of declaring source code unless Sun/Oracle had only
    one way, or a limited number of ways, to write them. See
    
    Satava, 323 F.3d at 812
    n.5 (“Under the merger doctrine,
    courts will not protect a copyrighted work from infringe-
    ment if the idea underlying the copyrighted work can be
    expressed in only one way, lest there be a monopoly on
    the underlying idea.”). The evidence showed that Oracle
    had “unlimited options as to the selection and arrange-
    ment of the 7000 lines Google copied.” Appellant Br. 50.
    Using the district court’s “java.lang.Math.max” example,
    Oracle explains that the developers could have called it
    any number of things, including “Math.maximum” or
    “Arith.larger.” This was not a situation where Oracle was
    selecting among preordained names and phrases to create
    its packages. 6 As the district court recognized, moreover,
    code—codes that obviously differ from those at issue
    here—counsel for Google responded: “Yes, but only the
    structure, sequence, and organization. Only the com-
    mand structure—what you need to access the functions.
    You’d have to rewrite all the millions of lines of code in
    Apple or in Microsoft which is what Google did in An-
    droid.” Oral Argument at 36:00.
    6   In their brief as amici curiae in support of rever-
    sal, Scott McNealy and Brian Sutphin—both former
    executives at Sun who were involved in the development
    of the Java platform—provide a detailed example of the
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                    31
    “the Android method and class names could have been
    different from the names of their counterparts in Java
    and still have worked.” Copyrightability Decision, 872 F.
    Supp. 2d at 976. Because “alternative expressions [we]re
    available,” there is no merger. See 
    Atari, 975 F.2d at 840
    .
    We further find that the district court erred in focus-
    ing its merger analysis on the options available to Google
    at the time of copying. It is well-established that copy-
    rightability and the scope of protectable activity are to be
    evaluated at the time of creation, not at the time of in-
    fringement. See Apple Computer, Inc. v. Formula Int’l,
    Inc., 
    725 F.2d 521
    , 524 (9th Cir. 1984) (quoting National
    Commission on New Technological Uses of Copyrighted
    Works, Final Report at 21 (1979) (“CONTU Report”)
    (recognizing that the Copyright Act was designed “to
    protect all works of authorship from the moment of their
    fixation in any tangible medium of expression”)). The
    focus is, therefore, on the options that were available to
    Sun/Oracle at the time it created the API packages. Of
    creative choices involved in designing a Java package.
    Looking at the “java.text” package, they explain that it
    “contains 25 classes, 2 interfaces, and hundreds of meth-
    ods to handle text, dates, numbers, and messages in a
    manner independent of natural human languages . . . .”
    Br. of McNealy and Sutphin 14-15. Java’s creators had to
    determine whether to include a java.text package in the
    first place, how long the package would be, what elements
    to include, how to organize that package, and how it
    would relate to other packages. 
    Id. at 16.
    This descrip-
    tion of Sun’s creative process is consistent with the evi-
    dence presented at trial. See Appellant Br. 12-13 (citing
    testimony that it took years to write some of the Java
    packages and that Sun/Oracle developers had to “wrestle
    with what functions to include in the package, which to
    put in other packages, and which to omit entirely”).
    32                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    course, once Sun/Oracle created “java.lang.Math.max,”
    programmers who want to use that particular package
    have to call it by that name. But, as the court acknowl-
    edged, nothing prevented Google from writing its own
    declaring code, along with its own implementing code, to
    achieve the same result. In such circumstances, the
    chosen expression simply does not merge with the idea
    being expressed. 7
    It seems possible that the merger doctrine, when
    properly analyzed, would exclude the three packages
    identified by the district court as core packages from the
    scope of actionable infringing conduct. This would be so if
    the Java authors, at the time these packages were creat-
    ed, had only a limited number of ways to express the
    methods and classes therein if they wanted to write in the
    Java language. In that instance, the idea may well be
    merged with the expression in these three packages. 8
    7  The district court did not find merger with respect
    to the structure, sequence, and organization of Oracle’s
    Java API packages. Nor could it, given the court’s recog-
    nition that there were myriad ways in which the API
    packages could have been organized. Indeed, the court
    found that the SSO is original and that “nothing in the
    rules of the Java language . . . required that Google
    replicate the same groupings.” Copyrightability Decision,
    
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 999. As discussed below, however, the
    court nonetheless found that the SSO is an uncopyrighta-
    ble “method of operation.”
    8  At oral argument, counsel for Oracle was asked
    whether we should view the three core packages “differ-
    ently vis-à-vis the concept of a method of operation than
    the other packages.” See Oral Argument at 7:43. He
    responded: “I think not your Honor. I would view them
    differently with respect to fair use . . . . It’s not that they
    are more basic. It’s that there are just several methods,
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                      33
    Google did not present its merger argument in this way
    below and does not do so here, however. Indeed, Google
    does not try to differentiate among the packages for
    purposes of its copyrightability analysis and does not
    appeal the infringement verdict as to the packages. For
    these reasons, we reject the trial court’s merger analysis.
    b. Short Phrases
    The district court also found that Oracle’s declaring
    code consists of uncopyrightable short phrases. Specifical-
    ly, the court concluded that, “while the Android method
    and class names could have been different from the
    names of their counterparts in Java and still have
    worked, copyright protection never extends to names or
    short phrases as a matter of law.” Copyrightability Deci-
    sion, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 976.
    The district court is correct that “[w]ords and short
    phrases such as names, titles, and slogans” are not sub-
    ject to copyright protection. 37 C.F.R. § 202.1(a). The
    court failed to recognize, however, that the relevant
    question for copyrightability purposes is not whether the
    work at issue contains short phrases—as literary works
    often do—but, rather, whether those phrases are creative.
    See Soc’y of Holy Transfiguration Monastery, Inc. v.
    that is, routines, within just those three packages that are
    necessary to ‘speak the Java language.’ Nothing in the
    other thirty-four packages is necessary in order to speak
    in Java, so to speak.” 
    Id. Counsel conceded,
    however,
    that this issue “might go to merger. It might go to the
    question whether someone—since we conceded that it’s
    okay to use the language—if it’s alright to use the lan-
    guage that there are certain things that the original
    developers had to say in order to use that language,
    arguably, although I still think it’s really a fair use analy-
    sis.” 
    Id. 34 ORACLE
    AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    Gregory, 
    689 F.3d 29
    , 52 (1st Cir. 2012) (noting that “not
    all short phrases will automatically be deemed uncopy-
    rightable”); see also 1 Melville B. Nimmer & David Nim-
    mer, Nimmer on Copyright § 2.01[B] (2013) (“[E]ven a
    short phrase may command copyright protection if it
    exhibits sufficient creativity.”). And, by dissecting the
    individual lines of declaring code at issue into short
    phrases, the district court further failed to recognize that
    an original combination of elements can be copyrightable.
    See Softel, Inc. v. Dragon Med. & Scientific Commc’ns,
    
    118 F.3d 955
    , 964 (2d Cir. 1997) (noting that, in Feist,
    “the Court made quite clear that a compilation of non-
    protectible elements can enjoy copyright protection even
    though its constituent elements do not”).
    By analogy, the opening of Charles Dickens’ A Tale of
    Two Cities is nothing but a string of short phrases. Yet no
    one could contend that this portion of Dickens’ work is
    unworthy of copyright protection because it can be broken
    into those shorter constituent components. The question
    is not whether a short phrase or series of short phrases
    can be extracted from the work, but whether the manner
    in which they are used or strung together exhibits creativ-
    ity.
    Although the district court apparently focused on in-
    dividual lines of code, Oracle is not seeking copyright
    protection for a specific short phrase or word. Instead,
    the portion of declaring code at issue is 7,000 lines, and
    Google’s own “Java guru” conceded that there can be
    “creativity and artistry even in a single method declara-
    tion.” Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 20,970. Because Oracle
    “exercised creativity in the selection and arrangement” of
    the method declarations when it created the API packages
    and wrote the relevant declaring code, they contain pro-
    tectable expression that is entitled to copyright protec-
    tion. See 
    Atari, 975 F.2d at 840
    ; see also 17 U.S.C. §§ 101,
    103 (recognizing copyright protection for “compilations”
    which are defined as work that is “selected, coordinated,
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                    35
    or arranged in such a way that the resulting work as a
    whole constitutes an original work of authorship”). Ac-
    cordingly, we conclude that the district court erred in
    applying the short phrases doctrine to find the declaring
    code not copyrightable.
    c. Scenes a Faire
    The scenes a faire doctrine, which is related to the
    merger doctrine, operates to bar certain otherwise crea-
    tive expression from copyright protection. Apple Comput-
    er, Inc. v. Microsoft Corp., 
    35 F.3d 1435
    , 1444 (9th Cir.
    1994). It provides that “expressive elements of a work of
    authorship are not entitled to protection against in-
    fringement if they are standard, stock, or common to a
    topic, or if they necessarily follow from a common theme
    or setting.” 
    Mitel, 124 F.3d at 1374
    . Under this doctrine,
    “when certain commonplace expressions are indispensable
    and naturally associated with the treatment of a given
    idea, those expressions are treated like ideas and there-
    fore [are] not protected by copyright.” Swirsky v. Carey,
    
    376 F.3d 841
    , 850 (9th Cir. 2004). In the computer con-
    text, “the scene a faire doctrine denies protection to pro-
    gram elements that are dictated by external factors such
    as ‘the mechanical specifications of the computer on which
    a particular program is intended to run’ or ‘widely accept-
    ed programming practices within the computer industry.’”
    
    Softel, 118 F.3d at 963
    (citation omitted).
    The trial court rejected Google’s reliance on the scenes
    a faire doctrine. It did so in a footnote, finding that
    Google had failed to present evidence to support the claim
    that either the grouping of methods within the classes or
    the code chosen for them “would be so expected and
    customary as to be permissible under the scenes a faire
    doctrine.” Copyrightability Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at
    999 n.9. Specifically, the trial court found that “it is
    impossible to say on this record that all of the classes and
    their contents are typical of such classes and, on this
    36                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    record, this order rejects Google’s global argument based
    on scenes a faire.” 
    Id. On appeal,
    Google refers to scenes a faire concepts
    briefly, as do some amici, apparently contending that,
    because programmers have become accustomed to and
    comfortable using the groupings in the Java API packag-
    es, those groupings are so commonplace as to be indispen-
    sable to the expression of an acceptable programming
    platform. As such, the argument goes, they are so associ-
    ated with the “idea” of what the packages are accomplish-
    ing that they should be treated as ideas rather than
    expression. See Br. of Amici Curiae Rackspace US, Inc.,
    et al. at 19-22.
    Google cannot rely on the scenes a faire doctrine as an
    alternative ground upon which we might affirm the
    copyrightability judgment of the district court. This is so
    for several reasons. First, as noted, like merger, in the
    Ninth Circuit, the scenes a faire doctrine is a component
    of the infringement analysis. “[S]imilarity of expression,
    whether literal or non-literal, which necessarily results
    from the fact that the common idea is only capable of
    expression in more or less stereotyped form, will preclude
    a finding of actionable similarity.” 4 Nimmer on Copy-
    right § 13.03[B][3]. Thus, the expression is not excluded
    from copyright protection; it is just that certain copying is
    forgiven as a necessary incident of any expression of the
    underlying idea. See 
    Satava, 323 F.3d at 810
    n.3 (“The
    Ninth Circuit treats scenes a faire as a defense to in-
    fringement rather than as a barrier to copyrightability.”).
    Second, Google has not objected to the trial court’s
    conclusion that Google failed to make a sufficient factual
    record to support its contention that the groupings and
    code chosen for the 37 Java API packages were driven by
    external factors or premised on features that were either
    commonplace or essential to the idea being expressed.
    Google provides no record citations indicating that such a
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                     37
    showing was made and does not contend that the trial
    court erred when it expressly found it was not. Indeed,
    Google does not even make this argument with respect to
    the core packages.
    Finally, Google’s reliance on the doctrine below and
    the amici reference to it here are premised on a funda-
    mental misunderstanding of the doctrine. Like merger,
    the focus of the scenes a faire doctrine is on the circum-
    stances presented to the creator, not the copier. See 
    Mitel, 124 F.3d at 1375
    (finding error to the extent the trial
    court discussed “whether external factors such as market
    forces and efficiency considerations justified Iqtel’s copy-
    ing of the command codes”). The court’s analytical focus
    must be upon the external factors that dictated Sun’s
    selection of classes, methods, and code—not upon what
    Google encountered at the time it chose to copy those
    groupings and that code. See 
    id. “[T]he scenes
    a faire
    doctrine identifies and excludes from protection against
    infringement expression whose creation ‘flowed naturally
    from considerations external to the author’s creativity.’”
    
    Id. (quoting Nimmer
    § 13.03[F][3], at 13-131 (1997)). It is
    this showing the trial court found Google failed to make,
    and Google cites to nothing in the record which indicates
    otherwise.
    For these reasons, the trial court was correct to con-
    clude that the scenes a faire doctrine does not affect the
    copyrightability of either the declaring code in, or the SSO
    of, the Java API packages at issue.
    2. The Structure, Sequence, and Organization
    of the API Packages
    The district court found that the SSO of the Java API
    packages is creative and original, but nevertheless held
    that it is a “system or method of operation . . . and, there-
    fore, cannot be copyrighted” under 17 U.S.C. § 102(b).
    Copyrightability Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 976-77. In
    reaching this conclusion, the district court seems to have
    38                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    relied upon language contained in a First Circuit decision:
    Lotus Development Corp. v. Borland International, Inc.,
    
    49 F.3d 807
    (1st Cir. 1995), aff’d without opinion by
    equally divided court, 
    516 U.S. 233
    (1996). 9
    In Lotus, it was undisputed that the defendant copied
    the menu command hierarchy and interface from Lotus 1-
    2-3, a computer spreadsheet program “that enables users
    to perform accounting functions electronically on a com-
    
    puter.” 49 F.3d at 809
    . The menu command hierarchy
    referred to a series of commands—such as “Copy,” “Print,”
    and “Quit”—which were arranged into more than 50
    menus and submenus. 
    Id. Although the
    defendant did
    not copy any Lotus source code, it copied the menu com-
    mand hierarchy into its rival program. The question
    before the court was “whether a computer menu command
    hierarchy is copyrightable subject matter.” 
    Id. Although it
    accepted the district court’s finding that
    Lotus developers made some expressive choices in select-
    ing and arranging the command terms, the First Circuit
    found that the command hierarchy was not copyrightable
    because, among other things, it was a “method of opera-
    tion” under Section 102(b). In reaching this conclusion,
    the court defined a “method of operation” as “the means
    by which a person operates something, whether it be a
    car, a food processor, or a computer.” 
    Id. at 815.
    10 Be-
    cause the Lotus menu command hierarchy provided “the
    means by which users control and operate Lotus 1-2-3,” it
    9   The Supreme Court granted certiorari in Lotus,
    but, shortly after oral argument, the Court announced
    that it was equally divided and that Justice Stevens took
    no part in the consideration or decision of the case. The
    Court therefore left the First Circuit’s decision undis-
    turbed. See 
    Lotus, 516 U.S. at 233-34
    .
    10  The Lotus majority cited no authority for this def-
    inition of “method of operation.”
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                     39
    was deemed unprotectable. 
    Id. For example,
    if users
    wanted to copy material, they would use the “Copy”
    command and the command terms would tell the comput-
    er what to do. According to the Lotus court, the “fact that
    Lotus developers could have designed the Lotus menu
    command hierarchy differently is immaterial to the
    question of whether it is a ‘method of operation.’” 
    Id. at 816.
    (noting that “our initial inquiry is not whether the
    Lotus menu command hierarchy incorporates any expres-
    sion”). The court further indicated that, “[i]f specific
    words are essential to operating something, then they are
    part of a ‘method of operation’ and, as such, are unpro-
    tectable.” 
    Id. On appeal,
    Oracle argues that the district court’s reli-
    ance on Lotus is misplaced because it is distinguishable
    on its facts and is inconsistent with Ninth Circuit law.
    We agree. First, while the defendant in Lotus did not
    copy any of the underlying code, Google concedes that it
    copied portions of Oracle’s declaring source code verbatim.
    Second, the Lotus court found that the commands at issue
    there (copy, print, etc.) were not creative, but it is undis-
    puted here that the declaring code and the structure and
    organization of the API packages are both creative and
    original. Finally, while the court in Lotus found the
    commands at issue were “essential to operating” the
    system, it is undisputed that—other than perhaps as to
    the three core packages—Google did not need to copy the
    structure, sequence, and organization of the Java API
    packages to write programs in the Java language.
    More importantly, however, the Ninth Circuit has not
    adopted the court’s “method of operation” reasoning in
    Lotus, and we conclude that it is inconsistent with bind-
    ing precedent. 11 Specifically, we find that Lotus is incon-
    11 As Oracle points out, the Ninth Circuit has cited
    Lotus only one time, on a procedural issue. See Danjaq
    40                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    sistent with Ninth Circuit case law recognizing that the
    structure, sequence, and organization of a computer
    program is eligible for copyright protection where it
    qualifies as an expression of an idea, rather than the idea
    itself. See Johnson 
    Controls, 886 F.2d at 1175
    -76. And,
    while the court in Lotus held “that expression that is part
    of a ‘method of operation’ cannot be 
    copyrighted,” 49 F.3d at 818
    , this court—applying Ninth Circuit law—reached
    the exact opposite conclusion, finding that copyright
    protects “the expression of [a] process or method,” 
    Atari, 975 F.2d at 839
    .
    We find, moreover, that the hard and fast rule set
    down in Lotus and employed by the district court here—
    i.e., that elements which perform a function can never be
    copyrightable—is at odds with the Ninth Circuit’s en-
    dorsement of the abstraction-filtration-comparison analy-
    sis discussed earlier. As the Tenth Circuit concluded in
    expressly rejecting the Lotus “method of operation” analy-
    sis, in favor of the Second Circuit’s abstraction-filtration-
    comparison test, “although an element of a work may be
    characterized as a method of operation, that element may
    nevertheless contain expression that is eligible for copy-
    right protection.” 
    Mitel, 124 F.3d at 1372
    . Specifically,
    the court found that Section 102(b) “does not extinguish
    the protection accorded a particular expression of an idea
    merely because that expression is embodied in a method
    of operation at a higher level of abstraction.” 
    Id. Other courts
    agree that components of a program that
    can be characterized as a “method of operation” may
    LLC v. Sony Corp., 
    263 F.3d 942
    , 954 (9th Cir. 2001)
    (citing Lotus for the proposition that delay “has been held
    permissible, among other reasons, when it is necessitated
    by the exhaustion of remedies through the administrative
    process . . . when it is used to evaluate and prepare a
    complicated claim”).
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                   41
    nevertheless be copyrightable. For example, the Third
    Circuit rejected a defendant’s argument that operating
    system programs are “per se” uncopyrightable because an
    operating system is a “method of operation” for a comput-
    er. Apple Computer, Inc. v. Franklin Computer Corp., 
    714 F.2d 1240
    , 1250-52 (3d Cir. 1983). The court distin-
    guished between the “method which instructs the com-
    puter to perform its operating functions” and “the
    instructions themselves,” and found that the instructions
    were copyrightable. 
    Id. at 1250-51.
    In its analysis, the
    court noted: “[t]hat the words of a program are used
    ultimately in the implementation of a process should in no
    way affect their copyrightability.” 
    Id. at 1252
    (quoting
    CONTU Report at 21). The court focused “on whether the
    idea is capable of various modes of expression” and indi-
    cated that, “[i]f other programs can be written or created
    which perform the same function as [i]n Apple’s operating
    system program, then that program is an expression of
    the idea and hence copyrightable.” 
    Id. at 1253.
    Notably,
    no other circuit has adopted the First Circuit’s “method of
    operation” analysis.
    Courts have likewise found that classifying a work as
    a “system” does not preclude copyright for the particular
    expression of that system. See Toro Co. v. R & R Prods.
    Co., 
    787 F.2d 1208
    , 1212 (8th Cir. 1986) (rejecting the
    district court’s decision that “appellant’s parts numbering
    system is not copyrightable because it is a ‘system’” and
    indicating that Section 102(b) does not preclude protec-
    tion for the “particular expression” of that system); see
    also Am. Dental Ass’n v. Delta Dental Plans Ass’n, 
    126 F.3d 977
    , 980 (7th Cir. 1997) (“A dictionary cannot be
    called a ‘system’ just because new novels are written
    using words, all of which appear in the dictionary. Nor is
    word-processing software a ‘system’ just because it has a
    command structure for producing paragraphs.”).
    Here, the district court recognized that the SSO “re-
    sembles a taxonomy,” but found that “it is nevertheless a
    42                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    command structure, a system or method of operation—a
    long hierarchy of over six thousand commands to carry
    out pre-assigned functions.” Copyrightability Decision,
    
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 999-1000. 12 In other words, the court
    concluded that, although the SSO is expressive, it is not
    copyrightable because it is also functional. The problem
    with the district court’s approach is that computer pro-
    grams are by definition functional—they are all designed
    to accomplish some task. Indeed, the statutory definition
    of “computer program” acknowledges that they function
    “to bring about a certain result.” See 17 U.S.C. § 101
    (defining a “computer program” as “a set of statements or
    instructions to be used directly or indirectly in a computer
    in order to bring about a certain result”). If we were to
    accept the district court’s suggestion that a computer
    program is uncopyrightable simply because it “carr[ies]
    out pre-assigned functions,” no computer program is
    protectable. That result contradicts Congress’s express
    intent to provide copyright protection to computer pro-
    grams, as well as binding Ninth Circuit case law finding
    computer programs copyrightable, despite their utilitari-
    an or functional purpose. Though the trial court did add
    the caveat that it “does not hold that the structure, se-
    quence and organization of all computer programs may be
    stolen,” Copyrightability Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at
    1002, it is hard to see how its method of operation analy-
    sis could lead to any other conclusion.
    While it does not appear that the Ninth Circuit has
    addressed the precise issue, we conclude that a set of
    commands to instruct a computer to carry out desired
    12 This analogy by the district court is meaningful
    because taxonomies, in varying forms, have generally
    been deemed copyrightable. See, e.g., Practice Mgmt. Info.
    Corp. v. Am. Med. Ass’n, 
    121 F.3d 516
    , 517-20 (9th Cir.
    1997); Am. 
    Dental, 126 F.3d at 978-81
    .
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                  43
    operations may contain expression that is eligible for
    copyright protection. See 
    Mitel, 124 F.3d at 1372
    . We
    agree with Oracle that, under Ninth Circuit law, an
    original work—even one that serves a function—is enti-
    tled to copyright protection as long as the author had
    multiple ways to express the underlying idea. Section
    102(b) does not, as Google seems to suggest, automatically
    deny copyright protection to elements of a computer
    program that are functional. Instead, as noted, Sec-
    tion 102(b) codifies the idea/expression dichotomy and the
    legislative history confirms that, among other things,
    Section 102(b) was “intended to make clear that the
    expression adopted by the programmer is the copyrighta-
    ble element in a computer program.” H.R. Rep. No. 1476,
    94th Cong., 2d Sess. 54, reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N.
    5659, 5670. Therefore, even if an element directs a com-
    puter to perform operations, the court must nevertheless
    determine whether it contains any separable expression
    entitled to protection.
    On appeal, Oracle does not—and concedes that it can-
    not—claim copyright in the idea of organizing functions of
    a computer program or in the “package-class-method”
    organizational structure in the abstract. Instead, Oracle
    claims copyright protection only in its particular way of
    naming and organizing each of the 37 Java API packag-
    es. 13 Oracle recognizes, for example, that it “cannot
    copyright the idea of programs that open an internet
    13   At oral argument, counsel for Oracle explained
    that it “would never claim that anyone who uses a pack-
    age-class-method manner of classifying violates our
    copyright. We don’t own every conceivable way of organ-
    izing, we own only our specific expression—our specific
    way of naming each of these 362 methods, putting them
    into 36 classes, and 20 subclasses.” Oral Argument at
    16:44.
    44                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    connection,” but “it can copyright the precise strings of
    code used to do so, at least so long as ‘other language is
    available’ to achieve the same function.” Appellant Reply
    Br. 13-14 (citation omitted). Thus, Oracle concedes that
    Google and others could employ the Java language—much
    like anyone could employ the English language to write a
    paragraph without violating the copyrights of other
    English language writers. And, that Google may employ
    the “package-class-method” structure much like authors
    can employ the same rules of grammar chosen by other
    authors without fear of infringement. What Oracle con-
    tends is that, beyond that point, Google, like any author,
    is not permitted to employ the precise phrasing or precise
    structure chosen by Oracle to flesh out the substance of
    its packages—the details and arrangement of the prose.
    As the district court acknowledged, Google could have
    structured Android differently and could have chosen
    different ways to express and implement the functionality
    that it copied. 14 Specifically, the court found that “the
    14 Amici McNealy and Sutphin explain that “a quick
    examination of other programming environments shows
    that creators of other development platforms provide the
    same functions with wholly different creative choices.”
    Br. of McNealy and Sutphin 17. For example, in Java, a
    developer setting the time zone would call the “setTime-
    Zone” method within the “DateFormat” class of the ja-
    va.text package. 
    Id. Apple’s iOS
    platform, on the other
    hand, “devotes an entire class to set the time zone in an
    application—the ‘NSTimeZone’ class” which is in the
    “Foundation framework.” 
    Id. at 17-18
    (noting that a
    “framework is Apple’s terminology for a structure concep-
    tually similar to Java’s ‘package’”). Microsoft provides
    similar functionality with “an entirely different structure,
    naming scheme, and selection.” 
    Id. at 18
    (“In its Windows
    Phone development platform, Microsoft stores its time
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                   45
    very same functionality could have been offered in An-
    droid without duplicating the exact command structure
    used in Java.” Copyrightability Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 976. The court further explained that Google could
    have offered the same functions in Android by “re-
    arranging the various methods under different groupings
    among the various classes and packages.” 
    Id. The evi-
    dence showed, moreover, that Google designed many of its
    own API packages from scratch, and, thus, could have
    designed its own corresponding 37 API packages if it
    wanted to do so.
    Given the court’s findings that the SSO is original and
    creative, and that the declaring code could have been
    written and organized in any number of ways and still
    have achieved the same functions, we conclude that
    Section 102(b) does not bar the packages from copyright
    protection just because they also perform functions.
    3. Google’s Interoperability Arguments
    are Irrelevant to Copyrightability
    Oracle also argues that the district court erred in in-
    voking interoperability in its copyrightability analysis.
    Specifically, Oracle argues that Google’s interoperability
    arguments are only relevant, if at all, to fair use—not to
    the question of whether the API packages are copyrighta-
    ble. We agree.
    In characterizing the SSO of the Java API packages
    as a “method of operation,” the district court explained
    that “[d]uplication of the command structure is necessary
    for interoperability.” Copyrightability Decision, 872 F.
    Supp. 2d at 977. The court found that, “[i]n order for at
    zone programs in the ‘TimeZoneInfo’ class in its ‘Systems’
    namespace (Microsoft’s version of a ‘package’ or ‘frame-
    work’).”). Again, this is consistent with the evidence
    presented at trial.
    46                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    least some of [the pre-Android Java] code to run on An-
    droid, Google was required to provide the same ja-
    va.package.Class.method() command system using the
    same names with the same ‘taxonomy’ and with the same
    functional specifications.” 
    Id. at 1000
    (emphasis omitted).
    And, the court concluded that “Google replicated what
    was necessary to achieve a degree of interoperability—but
    no more, taking care, as said before, to provide its own
    implementations.” 
    Id. In reaching
    this conclusion, the
    court relied primarily on two Ninth Circuit decisions:
    Sega Enterprises v. Accolade, Inc., 
    977 F.2d 1510
    (9th Cir.
    1992), and Sony Computer Entertainment, Inc. v. Con-
    nectix, Corp., 
    203 F.3d 596
    (9th Cir. 2000).
    Both Sega and Sony are fair use cases in which copy-
    rightability was addressed only tangentially. In Sega, for
    example, Sega manufactured a video game console and
    game cartridges that contained hidden functional pro-
    gram elements necessary to achieve compatibility with
    the console. Defendant Accolade: (1) reverse-engineered
    Sega’s video game programs to discover the requirements
    for compatibility; and (2) created its own games for the
    Sega console. 
    Sega, 977 F.2d at 1514-15
    . As part of the
    reverse-engineering process, Accolade made intermediate
    copies of object code from Sega’s console. 
    Id. Although the
    court recognized that the intermediate copying of
    computer code may infringe Sega’s copyright, it concluded
    that “disassembly of copyrighted object code is, as a
    matter of law, a fair use of the copyrighted work if such
    disassembly provides the only means of access to those
    elements of the code that are not protected by copyright
    and the copier has a legitimate reason for seeking such
    access.” 
    Id. at 1518.
    The court agreed with Accolade that
    its copying was necessary to examine the unprotected
    functional aspects of the program. 
    Id. at 1520.
    And,
    because Accolade had a legitimate interest in making its
    cartridges compatible with Sega’s console, the court found
    that Accolade’s intermediate copying was fair use.
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                   47
    Likewise, in Sony, the Ninth Circuit found that the
    defendant’s reverse engineering and intermediate copying
    of Sony’s copyrighted software program “was a fair use for
    the purpose of gaining access to the unprotected elements
    of Sony’s software.” 
    Sony, 203 F.3d at 602
    . The court
    explained that Sony’s software program contained unpro-
    tected functional elements and that the defendant could
    only access those elements through reverse engineering.
    
    Id. at 603.
    The defendant used that information to create
    a software program that let consumers play games de-
    signed for Sony’s PlayStation console on their computers.
    Notably, the defendant’s software program did not con-
    tain any of Sony’s copyrighted material. 
    Id. at 598.
        The district court characterized Sony and Sega as
    “close analogies” to this case. Copyrightability Decision,
    
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1000. According to the court, both
    decisions “held that interface procedures that were neces-
    sary to duplicate in order to achieve interoperability were
    functional aspects not copyrightable under Section
    102(b).” 
    Id. The district
    court’s reliance on Sega and
    Sony in the copyrightability context is misplaced, howev-
    er.
    As noted, both cases were focused on fair use, not cop-
    yrightability. In Sega, for example, the only question was
    whether Accolade’s intermediate copying was fair use.
    The court never addressed the question of whether Sega’s
    software code, which had functional elements, also con-
    tained separable creative expression entitled to protec-
    tion. Likewise, although the court in Sony determined
    that Sony’s computer program had functional elements, it
    never addressed whether it also had expressive elements.
    Sega and Sony are also factually distinguishable because
    the defendants in those cases made intermediate copies to
    understand the functional aspects of the copyrighted
    works and then created new products. See 
    Sony, 203 F.3d at 606-07
    ; 
    Sega, 977 F.2d at 1522-23
    . This is not a case
    where Google reverse-engineered Oracle’s Java packages
    48                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    to gain access to unprotected functional elements con-
    tained therein. As the former Register of Copyrights of
    the United States pointed out in his brief amicus curiae,
    “[h]ad Google reverse engineered the programming pack-
    ages to figure out the ideas and functionality of the origi-
    nal, and then created its own structure and its own literal
    code, Oracle would have no remedy under copyright
    whatsoever.” Br. for Amicus Curiae Ralph Oman 29.
    Instead, Google chose to copy both the declaring code and
    the overall SSO of the 37 Java API packages at issue.
    We disagree with Google’s suggestion that Sony and
    Sega created an “interoperability exception” to copyright-
    ability. See Appellee Br. 39 (citing Sony and Sega for the
    proposition that “compatibility elements are not copy-
    rightable under section 102(b)” (emphasis omitted)).
    Although both cases recognized that the software pro-
    grams at issue there contained unprotected functional
    elements, a determination that some elements are unpro-
    tected is not the same as saying that the entire work loses
    copyright protection. To accept Google’s reading would
    contradict Ninth Circuit case law recognizing that both
    the literal and non-literal components of a software
    program are eligible for copyright protection. See John-
    son 
    Controls, 886 F.2d at 1175
    . And it would ignore the
    fact that the Ninth Circuit endorsed the abstraction-
    filtration-comparison inquiry in Sega itself.
    As previously discussed, a court must examine the
    software program to determine whether it contains crea-
    tive expression that can be separated from the underlying
    function. See 
    Sega, 977 F.2d at 1524-25
    . In doing so, the
    court filters out the elements of the program that are
    “ideas” as well as elements that are “dictated by consider-
    ations of efficiency, so as to be necessarily incidental to
    that idea; required by factors external to the program
    itself.” 
    Altai, 982 F.2d at 707
    .
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                  49
    To determine “whether certain aspects of an allegedly
    infringed software are not protected by copyright law, the
    focus is on external factors that influenced the choice of
    the creator of the infringed product.” Dun & Bradstreet
    Software Servs., Inc. v. Grace Consulting, Inc., 
    307 F.3d 197
    , 215 (3d Cir. 2002) (citing 
    Altai, 982 F.2d at 714
    ;
    
    Mitel, 124 F.3d at 1375
    ). The Second Circuit, for example,
    has noted that programmers are often constrained in
    their design choices by “extrinsic considerations” includ-
    ing “the mechanical specifications of the computer on
    which a particular program is intended to run” and “com-
    patibility requirements of other programs with which a
    program is designed to operate in conjunction.” 
    Altai, 982 F.2d at 709-10
    (citing 3 Melville B. Nimmer & David
    Nimmer, Nimmer on Copyright § 13.01 at 13-66-71
    (1991)). The Ninth Circuit has likewise recognized that:
    (1) computer programs “contain many logical, structural,
    and visual display elements that are dictated by . . .
    external factors such as compatibility requirements and
    industry demands”; and (2) “[i]n some circumstances,
    even the exact set of commands used by the programmer
    is deemed functional rather than creative for purposes of
    copyright.” 
    Sega, 977 F.2d at 1524
    (internal citation
    omitted).
    Because copyrightability is focused on the choices
    available to the plaintiff at the time the computer pro-
    gram was created, the relevant compatibility inquiry asks
    whether the plaintiff’s choices were dictated by a need to
    ensure that its program worked with existing third-party
    programs. Dun & 
    Bradstreet, 307 F.3d at 215
    ; see also
    
    Atari, 975 F.2d at 840
    (“External factors did not dictate
    the design of the 10NES program.”). Whether a defend-
    ant later seeks to make its program interoperable with
    the plaintiff’s program has no bearing on whether the
    software the plaintiff created had any design limitations
    dictated by external factors. See Dun & 
    Bradstreet, 307 F.3d at 215
    (finding an expert’s testimony on interopera-
    50                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    bility “wholly misplaced” because he “looked at externali-
    ties from the eyes of the plagiarist, not the eyes of the
    program’s creator”). Stated differently, the focus is on the
    compatibility needs and programming choices of the party
    claiming copyright protection—not the choices the de-
    fendant made to achieve compatibility with the plaintiff’s
    program. Consistent with this approach, courts have
    recognized that, once the plaintiff creates a copyrightable
    work, a defendant’s desire “to achieve total compatibil-
    ity . . . is a commercial and competitive objective which
    does not enter into the . . . issue of whether particular
    ideas and expressions have merged.” Apple 
    Computer, 714 F.2d at 1253
    .
    Given this precedent, we conclude that the district
    court erred in focusing its interoperability analysis on
    Google’s desires for its Android software. See Copyrighta-
    bility Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 1000 (“Google replicat-
    ed what was necessary to achieve a degree of
    interoperability” with Java.). Whether Google’s software
    is “interoperable” in some sense with any aspect of the
    Java platform (although as Google concedes, certainly not
    with the JVM) has no bearing on the threshold question of
    whether Oracle’s software is copyrightable. It is the
    interoperability and other needs of Oracle—not those of
    Google—that apply in the copyrightability context, and
    there is no evidence that when Oracle created the Java
    API packages at issue it did so to meet compatibility
    requirements of other pre-existing programs.
    Google maintains on appeal that its use of the “Java
    class and method names and declarations was ‘the only
    and essential means’ of achieving a degree of interopera-
    bility with existing programs written in the [Java lan-
    guage].” Appellee Br. 49. Indeed, given the record
    evidence that Google designed Android so that it would
    not be compatible with the Java platform, or the JVM
    specifically, we find Google’s interoperability argument
    confusing. While Google repeatedly cites to the district
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                    51
    court’s finding that Google had to copy the packages so
    that an app written in Java could run on Android, it cites
    to no evidence in the record that any such app exists and
    points to no Java apps that either pre-dated or post-dated
    Android that could run on the Android platform. 15 The
    compatibility Google sought to foster was not with Ora-
    cle’s Java platform or with the JVM central to that plat-
    form. Instead, Google wanted to capitalize on the fact
    that software developers were already trained and experi-
    enced in using the Java API packages at issue. The
    district court agreed, finding that, as to the 37 Java API
    packages, “Google believed Java application programmers
    would want to find the same 37 sets of functionalities in
    the new Android system callable by the same names as
    used in Java.” Copyrightability Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 978. Google’s interest was in accelerating its develop-
    ment process by “leverag[ing] Java for its existing base of
    developers.” J.A. 2033, 2092. Although this competitive
    objective might be relevant to the fair use inquiry, we
    conclude that it is irrelevant to the copyrightability of
    Oracle’s declaring code and organization of the API pack-
    ages.
    Finally, to the extent Google suggests that it was enti-
    tled to copy the Java API packages because they had
    15   During oral argument, Google’s counsel stated
    that “a program written in the Java language can run on
    Android if it’s only using packages within the 37. So if
    I’m a developer and I have written a program, I’ve written
    it in Java, I can stick an Android header on it and it will
    run in Android because it is using the identical names of
    the classes, methods, and packages.” Oral Argument at
    31:31. Counsel did not identify any programs that use
    only the 37 API packages at issue, however, and did not
    attest that any such program would be useful. Nor did
    Google cite to any record evidence to support this claim.
    52                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    become the effective industry standard, we are unper-
    suaded. Google cites no authority for its suggestion that
    copyrighted works lose protection when they become
    popular, and we have found none. 16 In fact, the Ninth
    Circuit has rejected the argument that a work that later
    becomes the industry standard is uncopyrightable. See
    Practice Mgmt. Info. Corp. v. Am. Med. Ass’n, 
    121 F.3d 516
    , 520 n.8 (9th Cir. 1997) (noting that the district court
    found plaintiff’s medical coding system entitled to copy-
    right protection, and that, although the system had
    become the industry standard, plaintiff’s copyright did not
    prevent competitors “from developing comparative or
    better coding systems and lobbying the federal govern-
    ment and private actors to adopt them. It simply pre-
    vents wholesale copying of an existing system.”). Google
    was free to develop its own API packages and to “lobby”
    programmers to adopt them. Instead, it chose to copy
    16 Google argues that, in the same way a formerly
    distinctive trademark can become generic over time, a
    program element can lose copyright protection when it
    becomes an industry standard. But “it is to be expected
    that phrases and other fragments of expression in a
    highly successful copyrighted work will become part of the
    language. That does not mean they lose all protection in
    the manner of a trade name that has become generic.”
    Warner Bros., Inc. v. Am. Broadcasting Cos., 
    720 F.2d 231
    , 242 (2d Cir. 1983) (“No matter how well known a
    copyrighted phrase becomes, its author is entitled to
    guard against its appropriation to promote the sale of
    commercial products.”). Notably, even when a patented
    method or system becomes an acknowledged industry
    standard with acquiescence of the patent owner, any
    permissible use generally requires payment of a reasona-
    ble royalty, which Google refused to do here. See general-
    ly In re Innovatio IP Ventures, LLC, No. 11-C-9308, 
    2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 144061
    (N.D. Ill. Sept. 27, 2013).
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                    53
    Oracle’s declaring code and the SSO to capitalize on the
    preexisting community of programmers who were accus-
    tomed to using the Java API packages. That desire has
    nothing to do with copyrightability. For these reasons, we
    find that Google’s industry standard argument has no
    bearing on the copyrightability of Oracle’s work.
    B. Fair Use
    As noted, the jury hung on Google’s fair use defense,
    and the district court declined to order a new trial given
    its conclusion that the code and structure Google copied
    were not entitled to copyright protection. On appeal,
    Oracle argues that: (1) a remand to decide fair use “is
    pointless”; and (2) this court should find, as a matter of
    law, that “Google’s commercial use of Oracle’s work in a
    market where Oracle already competed was not fair use.”
    Appellant Br. 68.
    Fair use is an affirmative defense to copyright in-
    fringement and is codified in Section 107 of the Copyright
    Act. 
    Golan, 132 S. Ct. at 890
    (“[T]he fair use defense, is
    codified at 17 U.S.C. § 107.”). Section 107 permits use of
    copyrighted work if it is “for purposes such as criticism,
    comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple
    copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research.” 17
    U.S.C. § 107. The fair use doctrine has been referred to
    as “‘the most troublesome in the whole law of copyright.’”
    Monge v. Maya Magazines, Inc., 
    688 F.3d 1164
    , 1170 (9th
    Cir. 2012) (quoting Dellar v. Samuel Goldwyn, Inc., 
    104 F.2d 661
    , 662 (2d Cir. 1939) (per curiam)). It both per-
    mits and requires “courts to avoid rigid application of the
    copyright statute when, on occasion, it would stifle the
    very creativity which that law is designed to foster.”
    Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., 
    510 U.S. 569
    , 577
    (1994) (quoting Stewart v. Abend, 
    495 U.S. 207
    , 236
    (1990)).
    “Section 107 requires a case-by-case determination
    whether a particular use is fair, and the statute notes four
    54                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    nonexclusive factors to be considered.” Harper & Row
    Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enters., 
    471 U.S. 539
    , 549
    (1985). Those factors are: (1) “the purpose and character
    of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial
    nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;” (2) “the
    nature of the copyrighted work;” (3) “the amount and
    substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copy-
    righted work as a whole;” and (4) “the effect of the use
    upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted
    work.” 17 U.S.C. § 107. The Supreme Court has ex-
    plained that all of the statutory factors “are to be ex-
    plored, and the results weighed together, in light of the
    purpose[] of copyright,” which is “[t]o promote the Pro-
    gress of Science and useful Arts.” 
    Campbell, 510 U.S. at 578
    , 575 (internal citations omitted).
    “Fair use is a mixed question of law and fact.” Harper
    & 
    Row, 471 U.S. at 560
    . Thus, while subsidiary and
    controverted findings of fact must be reviewed for clear
    error under Rule 52 of the Federal Rules of Civil Proce-
    dure, the Ninth Circuit reviews the ultimate application
    of those facts de novo. See Seltzer v. Green Day, Inc., 
    725 F.3d 1170
    , 1175 (9th Cir. 2013) (citing SOFA Entm’t, Inc.
    v. Dodger Prods., Inc., 
    709 F.3d 1273
    , 1277 (9th Cir.
    2013)). Where there are no material facts at issue and
    “the parties dispute only the ultimate conclusions to be
    drawn from those facts, we may draw those conclusions
    without usurping the function of the jury.” 
    Id. (citing Fisher
    v. Dees, 
    794 F.2d 432
    , 436 (9th Cir. 1986)). Indeed,
    the Supreme Court has specifically recognized that,
    “[w]here the district court has found facts sufficient to
    evaluate each of the statutory factors, an appellate court
    ‘need not remand for further factfinding . . . [but] may
    conclude as a matter of law that [the challenged use]
    [does] not qualify as a fair use of the copyrighted work.’”
    Harper & 
    Row, 471 U.S. at 560
    (citation omitted).
    Of course, the corollary to this point is true as well—
    where there are material facts in dispute and those facts
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                      55
    have not yet been resolved by the trier of fact, appellate
    courts may not make findings of fact in the first instance.
    See Shawmut Bank, N.A. v. Kress Assocs., 
    33 F.3d 1477
    ,
    1504 (9th Cir. 1994) (“[W]e must avoid finding facts in the
    first instance.”); see also Golden Bridge Tech., Inc. v.
    Nokia, Inc., 
    527 F.3d 1318
    , 1323 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (“Appel-
    late courts review district court judgments; we do not find
    facts.”). Here, it is undisputed that neither the jury nor
    the district court made findings of fact to which we can
    refer in assessing the question of whether Google’s use of
    the API packages at issue was a “fair use” within the
    meaning of Section 107. Oracle urges resolution of the
    fair use question by arguing that the trial court should
    have decided the question as a matter of law based on the
    undisputed facts developed at trial, and that we can do so
    as well. Google, on the other hand, argues that many
    critical facts regarding fair use are in dispute. It asserts
    that the fact that the jury could not reach a resolution on
    the fair use defense indicates that at least some presuma-
    bly reasonable jurors found its use to be fair. And, Google
    asserts that, even if it is true that the district court erred
    in discussing concepts of “interoperability” when consider-
    ing copyrightability, those concepts are still relevant to its
    fair use defense. We turn first to a more detailed exami-
    nation of fair use.
    The first factor in the fair use inquiry involves “the
    purpose and character of the use, including whether such
    use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educa-
    tional purposes.” 17 U.S.C. § 107(1). This factor involves
    two sub-issues: (1) “whether and to what extent the new
    work is transformative,” 
    Campbell, 510 U.S. at 579
    (cita-
    tion and internal quotation marks omitted); and
    (2) whether the use serves a commercial purpose.
    A use is “transformative” if it “adds something new,
    with a further purpose or different character, altering the
    first with new expression, meaning or message.” 
    Id. The critical
    question is “whether the new work merely super-
    56                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    sede[s] the objects of the original creation . . . or instead
    adds something new.” 
    Id. (citations and
    internal quota-
    tion marks omitted). This inquiry “may be guided by the
    examples given in the preamble to § 107, looking to
    whether the use is for criticism, or comment, or news
    reporting, and the like.” 
    Id. at 578-79.
    “The Supreme
    Court has recognized that parodic works, like other works
    that comment and criticize, are by their nature often
    sufficiently transformative to fit clearly under the fair use
    exception.” Mattel Inc. v. Walking Mountain Prods., 
    353 F.3d 792
    , 800 (9th Cir. 2003) (citing 
    Campbell, 510 U.S. at 579
    ).
    Courts have described new works as “transformative”
    when “the works use copy-righted material for purposes
    distinct from the purpose of the original material.” Elvis
    Presley Enters., Inc. v. Passport Video, 
    349 F.3d 622
    , 629
    (9th Cir. 2003) (“Here, Passport’s use of many of the
    television clips is transformative because they are cited as
    historical reference points in the life of a remarkable
    entertainer.”), overruled on other grounds by Flexible
    Lifeline Sys., Inc. v. Precision Lift, Inc., 
    654 F.3d 989
    , 995
    (9th Cir. 2011) (per curiam); see also Bouchat v. Baltimore
    Ravens Ltd. P’ship, 
    619 F.3d 301
    , 309-10 (4th Cir. 2010)
    (quoting A.V. ex rel. Vanderhyge v. iParadigms, LLC, 
    562 F.3d 630
    , 638 (4th Cir. 2009) (“[A] transformative use is
    one that ‘employ[s] the quoted matter in a different man-
    ner or for a different purpose from the original.’”)). “A use
    is considered transformative only where a defendant
    changes a plaintiff’s copyrighted work or uses the plain-
    tiff’s copyrighted work in a different context such that the
    plaintiff’s work is transformed into a new creation.”
    Perfect 10, Inc. v. Amazon.com, Inc., 
    508 F.3d 1146
    , 1165
    (9th Cir. 2007) (quoting Wall Data Inc. v. L.A. County
    Sheriff’s Dep’t, 
    447 F.3d 769
    , 778 (9th Cir. 2006), and
    finding that Google’s use of thumbnail images in its
    search engine was “highly transformative”).
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                    57
    A work is not transformative where the user “makes
    no alteration to the expressive content or message of the
    original work.” 
    Seltzer, 725 F.3d at 1177
    ; see also Wall
    
    Data, 447 F.3d at 778
    (“The Sheriff’s Department created
    exact copies of RUMBA’s software. It then put those
    copies to the identical purpose as the original software.
    Such a use cannot be considered transformative.”); 
    Monge, 688 F.3d at 1176
    (finding that a magazine’s publication of
    photographs of a secret celebrity wedding “sprinkled with
    written commentary” was “at best minimally transforma-
    tive” where the magazine “did not transform the photos
    into a new work . . . or incorporate the photos as part of a
    broader work”); Elvis Presley 
    Enters., 349 F.3d at 629
    (finding that use of copyrighted clips of Elvis’s television
    appearances was not transformative where “some of the
    clips [we]re played without much interruption, if any . . .
    [and] instead serve[d] the same intrinsic entertainment
    value that is protected by Plaintiffs’ copyrights.”). Where
    the use “is for the same intrinsic purpose as [the copyright
    holder’s] . . . such use seriously weakens a claimed fair
    use.” Worldwide Church of God v. Phila. Church of God,
    Inc., 
    227 F.3d 1110
    , 1117 (9th Cir. 2000) (quoting Weiss-
    mann v. Freeman, 
    868 F.2d 1313
    , 1324 (2d Cir. 1989)).
    Analysis of the first factor also requires inquiry into
    the commercial nature of the use. Use of the copyrighted
    work that is commercial “tends to weigh against a finding
    of fair use.” Harper & 
    Row, 471 U.S. at 562
    (“The crux of
    the profit/nonprofit distinction is not whether the sole
    motive of the use is monetary gain but whether the user
    stands to profit from exploitation of the copyrighted
    material without paying the customary price.”). “[T]he
    more transformative the new work, the less will be the
    significance of other factors, like commercialism, that may
    weigh against a finding of fair use.” 
    Campbell, 510 U.S. at 579
    .
    The second factor—the nature of the copyrighted
    work—“calls for recognition that some works are closer to
    58                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    the core of intended copyright protection than others, with
    the consequence that fair use is more difficult to establish
    when the former works are copied.” 
    Id. at 586.
    This
    factor “turns on whether the work is informational or
    creative.” Worldwide Church of 
    God, 227 F.3d at 1118
    ;
    see also Harper & 
    Row, 471 U.S. at 563
    (“The law general-
    ly recognizes a greater need to disseminate factual works
    than works of fiction or fantasy.”). Creative expression
    “falls within the core of the copyright’s protective purpos-
    es.” 
    Campbell, 510 U.S. at 586
    . Because computer pro-
    grams have both functional and expressive components,
    however, where the functional components are themselves
    unprotected (because, e.g., they are dictated by considera-
    tions of efficiency or other external factors), those ele-
    ments should be afforded “a lower degree of protection
    than more traditional literary works.” 
    Sega, 977 F.2d at 1526
    . Thus, where the nature of the work is such that
    purely functional elements exist in the work and it is
    necessary to copy the expressive elements in order to
    perform those functions, consideration of this second
    factor arguably supports a finding that the use is fair.
    The third factor asks the court to examine “the
    amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation
    to the copyrighted work as a whole.” 17 U.S.C. § 107(3).
    Analysis of this factor is viewed in the context of the
    copyrighted work, not the infringing work. Indeed, the
    statutory language makes clear that “a taking may not be
    excused merely because it is insubstantial with respect to
    the infringing work.” Harper & 
    Row, 471 U.S. at 565
    .
    “As Judge Learned Hand cogently remarked, ‘no plagia-
    rist can excuse the wrong by showing how much of his
    work he did not pirate.’” 
    Id. (quoting Sheldon
    v. Metro-
    Goldwyn Pictures Corp., 
    81 F.2d 49
    , 56 (2d Cir. 1936)). In
    contrast, “the fact that a substantial portion of the in-
    fringing work was copied verbatim is evidence of the
    qualitative value of the copied material, both to the origi-
    nator and to the plagiarist who seeks to profit from mar-
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                      59
    keting someone else’s copyrighted expression.” 
    Id. The Ninth
    Circuit has recognized that, while “wholesale
    copying does not preclude fair use per se, copying an
    entire work militates against a finding of fair use.”
    Worldwide Church of 
    God, 227 F.3d at 1118
    (internal
    citation and quotation omitted). “If the secondary user
    only copies as much as is necessary for his or her intended
    use, then this factor will not weigh against him or her.”
    Kelly v. Arriba Soft Corp., 
    336 F.3d 811
    , 820-21 (9th Cir.
    2003). Under this factor, “attention turns to the persua-
    siveness of a parodist’s justification for the particular
    copying done, and the enquiry will harken back to the
    first of the statutory factors . . . [because] the extent of
    permissible copying varies with the purpose and character
    of the use.” 
    Campbell, 510 U.S. at 586
    -87.
    The fourth and final factor focuses on “the effect of the
    use upon the potential market for or value of the copy-
    righted work.” Harper & 
    Row, 471 U.S. at 566
    . This
    factor reflects the idea that fair use “is limited to copying
    by others which does not materially impair the marketa-
    bility of the work which is copied.” 
    Id. at 566-67.
    The
    Supreme Court has said that this factor is “undoubtedly
    the single most important element of fair use.” 
    Id. at 566.
    It requires that courts “consider not only the extent of
    market harm caused by the particular actions of the
    alleged infringer, but also whether unrestricted and
    widespread conduct of the sort engaged in by the defend-
    ant . . . would result in a substantially adverse impact on
    the potential market for the original.” 
    Campbell, 510 U.S. at 590
    (citation and quotation marks omitted). “Market
    harm is a matter of degree, and the importance of this
    factor will vary, not only with the amount of harm, but
    also with the relative strength of the showing on the other
    factors.” 
    Id. at 590
    n.21.
    Oracle asserts that all of these factors support its po-
    sition that Google’s use was not “fair use”—Google know-
    ingly and illicitly copied a creative work to further its own
    60                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    commercial purposes, did so verbatim, and did so to the
    detriment of Oracle’s market position. These undisputa-
    ble facts, according to Oracle, should end the fair use
    inquiry. Oracle’s position is not without force. On many
    of these points, Google does not debate Oracle’s character-
    ization of its conduct, nor could it on the record evidence.
    Google contends, however, that, although it admitted-
    ly copied portions of the API packages and did so for what
    were purely commercial purposes, a reasonable juror still
    could find that: (1) Google’s use was transformative;
    (2) the Java API packages are entitled only to weak
    protection; (3) Google’s use was necessary to work within
    a language that had become an industry standard; and
    (4) the market impact on Oracle was not substantial.
    On balance, we find that due respect for the limit of
    our appellate function requires that we remand the fair
    use question for a new trial. First, although it is undis-
    puted that Google’s use of the API packages is commer-
    cial, the parties disagree on whether its use is
    “transformative.” Google argues that it is, because it
    wrote its own implementing code, created its own virtual
    machine, and incorporated the packages into a
    smartphone platform. For its part, Oracle maintains that
    Google’s use is not transformative because: (1) “[t]he same
    code in Android . . . enables programmers to invoke the
    same pre-programmed functions in exactly the same
    way;” and (2) Google’s use of the declaring code and
    packages does not serve a different function from Java.
    Appellant Reply Br. 47. While Google overstates what
    activities can be deemed transformative under a correct
    application of the law, we cannot say that there are no
    material facts in dispute on the question of whether
    Google’s use is “transformative,” even under a correct
    reading of the law. As such, we are unable to resolve this
    issue on appeal.
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                    61
    Next, while we have concluded that it was error for
    the trial court to focus unduly on the functional aspects of
    the packages, and on Google’s competitive desire to
    achieve commercial “interoperability” when deciding
    whether Oracle’s API packages are entitled to copyright
    protection, we expressly noted that these factors may be
    relevant to a fair use analysis. While the trial court erred
    in concluding that these factors were sufficient to over-
    come Oracle’s threshold claim of copyrightability, reason-
    able jurors might find that they are relevant to Google’s
    fair use defense under the second and third factors of the
    inquiry. See 
    Sega, 977 F.2d at 1524-25
    (discussing the
    Second Circuit’s approach to “break[ing] down a computer
    program into its component subroutines and sub-
    subroutines and then identif[ying] the idea or core func-
    tional element of each” in the context of the second fair
    use factor: the nature of the copyrighted work). We find
    this particularly true with respect to those core packages
    which it seems may be necessary for anyone to copy if
    they are to write programs in the Java language. And, it
    may be that others of the packages were similarly essen-
    tial components of any Java language-based program. So
    far, that type of filtration analysis has not occurred.
    Finally, as to market impact, the district court found
    that “Sun and Oracle never successfully developed its own
    smartphone platform using Java technology.” Copyright-
    ability Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 978. But Oracle
    argues that, when Google copied the API packages, Oracle
    was licensing in the mobile and smartphone markets, and
    that Android’s release substantially harmed those com-
    mercial opportunities as well as the potential market for a
    Java smartphone device. Because there are material
    facts in dispute on this factor as well, remand is neces-
    sary.
    Ultimately, we conclude that this is not a case in
    which the record contains sufficient factual findings upon
    which we could base a de novo assessment of Google’s
    62                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    affirmative defense of fair use. Accordingly, we remand
    this question to the district court for further proceedings.
    On remand, the district court should revisit and revise its
    jury instructions on fair use consistent with this opinion
    so as to provide the jury with a clear and appropriate
    picture of the fair use defense. 17
    II. GOOGLE’S CROSS-APPEAL
    Google cross-appeals from the portion of the district
    court’s final judgment entered in favor of Oracle on its
    claim for copyright infringement as to the nine lines of
    17  Google argues that, if we allow it to retry its fair
    use defense on remand, it is entitled to a retrial on in-
    fringement as well. We disagree. The question of wheth-
    er Google’s copying constituted infringement of a
    copyrighted work is “distinct and separable” from the
    question of whether Google can establish a fair use de-
    fense to its copying. See Gasoline Prods. Co. v. Champlin
    Refining Co., 
    283 U.S. 494
    , 500 (1931) (“Where the prac-
    tice permits a partial new trial, it may not properly be
    resorted to unless it clearly appears that the issue to be
    retried is so distinct and separable from the others that a
    trial of it alone may be had without injustice.”). Indeed,
    we have emphasized more than once in this opinion the
    extent to which the questions are separable, and the
    confusion and error caused when they are blurred. The
    issues are not “interwoven” and it would not create “con-
    fusion and uncertainty” to reinstate the infringement
    verdict and submit fair use to a different jury. 
    Id. We note,
    moreover, that, because Google only mentions this
    point in passing, with no development of an argument in
    support of it, under our case law, it has not been properly
    raised. See SmithKline Beecham Corp. v. Apotex Corp.,
    
    439 F.3d 1312
    , 1320 (Fed. Cir. 2006) (when a party pro-
    vides no developed argument on a point, we treat that
    argument as waived) (collecting cases).
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                     63
    rangeCheck code and the eight decompiled files. Final
    Judgment, Oracle Am., Inc. v. Google Inc., No. 3:10-cv-
    3561 (N.D. Cal. June 20, 2012), ECF No. 1211. Specifical-
    ly, Google appeals from the district court’s decisions:
    (1) granting Oracle’s motion for JMOL of infringement as
    to the eight decompiled Java files that Google copied into
    Android; and (2) denying Google’s motion for JMOL with
    respect to rangeCheck.
    When reviewing a district court’s grant or denial of a
    motion for JMOL, we apply the procedural law of the
    relevant regional circuit, here the Ninth Circuit. Trading
    Techs. Int’l, Inc. v. eSpeed, Inc., 
    595 F.3d 1340
    , 1357 (Fed.
    Cir. 2010). The Ninth Circuit reviews a district court’s
    JMOL decision de novo, applying the same standard as
    the district court. Mangum v. Action Collection Serv.,
    Inc., 
    575 F.3d 935
    , 938 (9th Cir. 2009). To grant judg-
    ment as a matter of law, the court must find that “the
    evidence presented at trial permits only one reasonable
    conclusion” and that “no reasonable juror could find in the
    non-moving party’s favor.” 
    Id. at 938-39
    (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted).
    Oracle explains that the eight decompiled files at is-
    sue “contain security functions governing access to net-
    work files” while rangeCheck “facilitates an important
    sorting function, frequently called upon during the opera-
    tion of Java and Android.” Oracle Response to Cross-
    Appeal 60-61. At trial, Google conceded that it copied the
    eight decompiled Java code files and the nine lines of code
    referred to as rangeCheck into Android. Its only defense
    was that the copying was de minimis. Accordingly, the
    district court instructed the jury that, “[w]ith respect to
    the infringement issues concerning the rangeCheck and
    other similar files, Google agrees that the accused lines of
    code and comments came from the copyrighted materials
    but contends that the amounts involved were so negligible
    as to be de minimis and thus should be excluded.” Final
    Charge to the Jury (Phase One), Oracle Am., Inc. v.
    64                      ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    Google, Inc., No. 3:10-cv-3561 (N.D. Cal. Apr. 30, 2012),
    ECF No. 1018, at 14.
    Although the jury found that Google infringed Ora-
    cle’s copyright in the nine lines of code comprising
    rangeCheck, it returned a noninfringement verdict as to
    eight decompiled security files. But because the trial
    testimony was that Google’s use of the decompiled files
    was significant—and there was no testimony to the con-
    trary—the district court concluded that “[n]o reasonable
    jury could find that this copying was de minimis.” Order
    Granting JMOL on Decompiled Files, 2012 U.S. Dist.
    LEXIS 66417, at *6. As such, the court granted Oracle’s
    motion for JMOL of infringement as to the decompiled
    security files.
    On appeal, Google maintains that its copying of
    rangeCheck and the decompiled security files was de
    minimis and thus did not infringe any of Oracle’s copy-
    rights. According to Google, the district court should
    have denied Oracle’s motion for JMOL “because substan-
    tial evidence supported the jury’s verdict that Google’s use
    of eight decompiled test files was de minimis.” Cross-
    Appellant Br. 76. Google further argues that the court
    should have granted its motion for JMOL as to
    rangeCheck because the “trial evidence revealed that the
    nine lines of rangeCheck code were both quantitatively
    and qualitatively insignificant in relation to the [Java]
    platform.” 
    Id. at 78.
        In response, Oracle argues that the Ninth Circuit does
    not recognize a de minimis defense to copyright infringe-
    ment and that, even if it does, we should affirm the judg-
    ments of infringement on grounds that Google’s copying
    was significant. Because we agree with Oracle on its
    second point, we need not address the first, except to note
    that there is some conflicting Ninth Circuit precedent on
    the question of whether there is a free-standing de mini-
    mis defense to copyright infringement or whether the
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                    65
    substantiality of the alleged copying is best addressed as
    part of a fair use defense. Compare Norse v. Henry Holt &
    Co., 
    991 F.2d 563
    , 566 (9th Cir. 1993) (indicating that
    “even a small taking may sometimes be actionable” and
    the “question of whether a copying is substantial enough
    to be actionable may be best resolved through the fair use
    doctrine”), with Newton v. Diamond, 
    388 F.3d 1189
    , 1192-
    93 (9th Cir. 2003) (“For an unauthorized use of a copy-
    righted work to be actionable, the use must be significant
    enough to constitute infringement. This means that even
    where the fact of copying is conceded, no legal conse-
    quences will follow from that fact unless the copying is
    substantial.”) (internal citation omitted)). 18
    Even assuming that the Ninth Circuit recognizes a
    stand-alone de minimis defense to copyright infringement,
    however, we conclude that: (1) the jury reasonably found
    that Google’s copying of the rangeCheck files was more
    than de minimis; and (2) the district court correctly
    concluded that the defense failed as a matter of law with
    respect to the decompiled security files.
    First, the unrebutted testimony at trial revealed that
    rangeCheck and the decompiled security files were signif-
    icant to both Oracle and Google. Oracle’s expert, Dr. John
    Mitchell, testified that Android devices call the
    18   At least one recent district court decision has rec-
    ognized uncertainty in Ninth Circuit law on this point.
    See Brocade Commc’ns Sys. v. A10 Networks, Inc., No. 10-
    cv-3428, 
    2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8113
    , at *33 (N.D. Cal.
    Jan. 10, 2013) (“The Ninth Circuit has been unclear about
    whether the de minimis use doctrine serves as an affirma-
    tive defense under the Copyright Act’s fair use exceptions
    or whether the doctrine merely highlights plaintiffs’
    obligation to show that ‘the use must be significant
    enough to constitute infringement.’”) (citing 
    Newton, 388 F.2d at 1193
    ; 
    Norse, 991 F.2d at 566
    ).
    66                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    rangeCheck function 2,600 times just in powering on the
    device. Although Google argues that the eight decompiled
    files were insignificant because they were used only to
    test the Android platform, Dr. Mitchell testified that
    “using the copied files even as test files would have been
    significant use” and the district court specifically found
    that “[t]here was no testimony to the contrary.” Order
    Granting JMOL on Decompiled Files, 2012 U.S. Dist.
    LEXIS 66417, at *6. Given this testimony, a reasonable
    jury could not have found Google’s copying de minimis.
    Google emphasizes that the nine lines of rangeCheck
    code “represented an infinitesimal percentage of the 2.8
    million lines of code in the 166 Java packages—let alone
    the millions of lines of code in the entire [Java] platform.”
    Google Cross-Appeal Br. 78-79. To the extent Google is
    arguing that a certain minimum number of lines of code
    must be copied before a court can find infringement, that
    argument is without merit. See Baxter v. MCA, Inc., 
    812 F.2d 421
    , 425 (9th Cir. 1987) (“[N]o bright line rule exists
    as to what quantum of similarity is permitted.”). And,
    given the trial testimony that both rangeCheck and the
    decompiled security files are qualitatively significant and
    Google copied them in their entirety, Google cannot show
    that the district court erred in denying its motion for
    JMOL.
    We have considered Google’s remaining arguments
    and find them unpersuasive. Accordingly, we affirm both
    of the JMOL decisions at issue in Google’s cross-appeal.
    III. GOOGLE’S POLICY-BASED ARGUMENTS
    Many of Google’s arguments, and those of some amici,
    appear premised on the belief that copyright is not the
    correct legal ground upon which to protect intellectual
    property rights to software programs; they opine that
    patent protection for such programs, with its insistence on
    non-obviousness, and shorter terms of protection, might
    be more applicable, and sufficient. Indeed, the district
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                    67
    court’s method of operation analysis seemed to say as
    much. Copyrightability Decision, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    at 984
    (stating that this case raises the question of “whether the
    copyright holder is more appropriately asserting an
    exclusive right to a functional system, process, or method
    of operation that belongs in the realm of patents, not
    copyrights”). Google argues that “[a]fter Sega, developers
    could no longer hope to protect [software] interfaces by
    copyright . . . Sega signaled that the only reliable means
    for protecting the functional requirements for achieving
    interoperability was by patenting them.” Appellee Br. 40
    (quoting Pamela Samuelson, Are Patents on Interfaces
    Impeding Interoperability? 
    93 Minn. L
    . Rev. 1943, 1959
    (2009)). And, Google relies heavily on articles written by
    Professor Pamela Samuelson, who has argued that “it
    would be best for a commission of computer program
    experts to draft a new form of intellectual property law for
    machine-readable programs.”           Pamela Samuelson,
    CONTU Revisited: The Case Against Copyright Protection
    for Computer Programs in Machine-Readable Form, 1984
    Duke L.J. 663, 764 (1984). Professor Samuelson has more
    recently argued that “Altai and Sega contributed to the
    eventual shift away from claims of copyright in program
    interfaces and toward reliance on patent protection.
    Patent protection also became more plausible and attrac-
    tive as the courts became more receptive to software
    patents.” Samuelson, 
    93 Minn. L
    . Rev. at 1959.
    Although Google, and the authority on which it relies,
    seem to suggest that software is or should be entitled to
    protection only under patent law—not copyright law—
    several commentators have recently argued the exact
    opposite.       See     Technology   Quarterly, Stalking
    Trolls, ECONOMIST, Mar. 8, 2014, http://www.economist.
    com/news/technology-quarterly/21598321-intellectual-
    property-after-being-blamed-stymying-innovation-
    america-vague (“[M]any innovators have argued that the
    electronics and software industries would flourish if
    68                       ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.
    companies trying to bring new technology (software
    innovations included) to market did not have to worry
    about being sued for infringing thousands of absurd
    patents at every turn. A perfectly adequate means of
    protecting and rewarding software developers for their
    ingenuity has existed for over 300 years. It is called
    copyright.”); Timothy B. Lee, Will the Supreme Court save
    us from software patents?, WASH. POST, Feb. 26, 2014, 1:13
    PM, http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-switch/wp/
    2014/02/26/will-the-supreme-court-save-us-from-software-
    patents/ (“If you write a book or a song, you can get copy-
    right protection for it. If you invent a new pill or a better
    mousetrap, you can get a patent on it. But for the last
    two decades, software has had the distinction of being
    potentially eligible for both copyright and patent protec-
    tion. Critics say that’s a mistake. They argue that the
    complex and expensive patent system is a terrible fit for
    the fast-moving software industry. And they argue that
    patent protection is unnecessary because software innova-
    tors already have copyright protection available.”).
    Importantly for our purposes, the Supreme Court has
    made clear that “[n]either the Copyright Statute nor any
    other says that because a thing is patentable it may not
    be copyrighted.” Mazer v. Stein, 
    347 U.S. 201
    , 217 (1954).
    Indeed, the thrust of the CONTU Report is that copyright
    is “the most suitable mode of legal protection for computer
    software.” Peter S. Menell, An Analysis of the Scope of
    Copyright Protection for Application Programs, 41 Stan.
    L. Rev. 1045, 1072 (1989); see also CONTU Report at 1
    (recommending that copyright law be amended “to make
    it explicit that computer programs, to the extent that they
    embody an author’s original creation, are proper subject
    matter of copyright”). Until either the Supreme Court or
    Congress tells us otherwise, we are bound to respect the
    Ninth Circuit’s decision to afford software programs
    protection under the copyright laws. We thus decline any
    ORACLE AMERICA, INC.   v. GOOGLE INC.                    69
    invitation to declare that protection of software programs
    should be the domain of patent law, and only patent law.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the de-
    claring code and the structure, sequence, and organiza-
    tion of the 37 Java API packages at issue are entitled to
    copyright protection. We therefore reverse the district
    court’s copyrightability determination with instructions to
    reinstate the jury’s infringement verdict. Because the
    jury hung on fair use, we remand Google’s fair use defense
    for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
    With respect to Google’s cross-appeal, we affirm the
    district court’s decisions: (1) granting Oracle’s motion for
    JMOL as to the eight decompiled Java files that Google
    copied into Android; and (2) denying Google’s motion for
    JMOL with respect to the rangeCheck function. Accord-
    ingly, we affirm-in-part, reverse-in-part, and remand for
    further proceedings.
    AFFIRMED-IN-PART, REVERSED-IN-PART,
    AND REMANDED
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2013-1021, 2013-1022

Citation Numbers: 750 F.3d 1339, 110 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1985, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 8744, 2014 WL 1855277

Judges: O'Malley, Plager, Taranto

Filed Date: 5/9/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

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