Forbesflipped into Editor's PicksSupreme Court Hearing On A $9 Billion Case Involving Oracle And Google Could Reshape The Software IndustryForbes - Martin GilesIn a landmark moment in the history of the U.S. software industry, the Supreme Court held a hearing on October 7 into a long-running legal dispute that pits tech giants Oracle and Google against one another. The case centers around whether or not a key foundation of today’s increasingly …
The Brigadeflipped into TrendDownGoogle and Oracle are headed to the Supreme Court. The future of software hangs in the balance.Protocol - Tom KrazitA generation of software built around shared assumptions for interoperability faces an uncertain future depending on the outcome of a yearslong legal …
USA TODAYflipped into Top StoriesOracle founder Larry Ellison opts for Hawaii over Texas when software giant moves HQ from Silicon Valleyverified_publisherUSA TODAY - Mike SniderOracle co-founder Larry Ellison, one of the richest people in the world, won't join the software giant in its upcoming move to Texas. The Silicon Valley-based provider of business software last week said it would relocate its headquarters to Austin, Texas. Oracle would keep an offices in Silicon …
Cristian Mejiaflipped into Empresa Oracle salaries revealed: Here are the six-figure salaries the $175 billion enterprise tech giant offers for jobs in software development, sales and marketingverified_publisherBusiness Insider - Benjamin Pimentel and Alex NicollOracle disclosed last week that CEO Safra Catz got a base salary of $950,000 and roughly $14,000 in other compensation in its last fiscal year. How would that compare with other Oracle employees? Like other major corporations, Oracle is now required to disclose the ratio of its CEO's pay to median …
CNNflipped into Top StoriesSupreme Court puzzles over the nature of software in landmark Google v. Oracle caseverified_publisherCNN - By Brian Fung(CNN Business) — A historic, multibillion-dollar lawsuit between Oracle and Google may come down to the jumbled attempts on Wednesday by eight Supreme Court justices to find an appropriate analogy to describe common computer code. From grocery stores to restaurant menus to QWERTY keyboards, the …