SAP has acknowledged in a court filing that its TomorrowNow subsidiary engaged in "inappropriate downloads" of Oracle's proprietary fixes and support documents. SAP, a German-based enterprise software ...
German software giant SAP admitted Tuesday that employees at an American subsidiary made “inappropriate downloads” of material belonging to rival Oracle. Oracle, based in Redwood City, filed a federal ...
Oracle Corp. told a federal jury that SAP AG's board of directors knew as far back as 2005 that a software maintenance unit was illegally downloading Oracle software and infringing on its copyrights.
Oracle, however, isn't giving up its appeal to have a jury's $1.3 billion award in the case reinstated, ensuring that the bitter dispute will continue. "SAP believes this case has gone on long enough.
Oracle's 43-page lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco, focuses on SAP's TomorrowNow, a third-party provider of support services for Oracle's PeopleSoft, J.D. Edwards and Siebel ...
SAP and Oracle have reached a settlement for a long-running legal battle over software copyrights, with SAP paying Oracle $356.7 million. The case, which involved the improper download of Oracle files ...
Business applications software company SAP has admitted that its subsidiary TomorrowNow made some "inappropriate" downloads of Oracle software, but has denied it had access to Oracle intellectual ...
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... Munich, Germany – SAP AG, the world’s largest maker of business-management software, said it made “inappropriate” downloads of Oracle Corp. documents, ...
FRANKFURT, July 3 (Reuters) - SAP admitted on Tuesday its TomorrowNow unit had carried out some "inappropriate downloads" of documents belonging to Oracle but said SAP had not had access to that ...
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