Regarded by many industry onlookers as the “Copyright Case of the Century,” a new precedent has been set for copyright law that has swung in Google’s favor following a landmark court ruling, 10 years since Oracle first cried foul play. By allowing Google to run with Oracle’s intellectual property, Faultline’s interpretation is that the Supreme Court has singlehandedly written a new definition of copyright in technology. It questions everything. If a piece of code cannot be copyrighted because its use was integral to building bigger and better things in the public interest, then where are the lines drawn? Could a piece of hardware be manipulated in the same way to avoid copyright? What about content? Successfully copyrighting a film or…