Santa Clara Law Professor Tyler Ochoa was asked to opine on Monday’s Oracle v. Google verdict by five media outlets, including the L.A. Times and The San Jose Mercury News. Professor Ochoa is a recognized expert in copyright and rights of publicity law and teaches a variety of intellectual property courses for the law school.

Legal experts decipher Oracle-Google verdict
CNET
Tyler Ochoa of Santa Clara Law School called the decision "a bit of a mixed bag." "It’s not a clear victory for either side," he said, offering several
 

Google infringed on Oracle copyrights, jury finds
San Jose Mercury News
If Alsup rules the APIs are not covered by copyright, that would hand a clear victory to Google, said Santa Clara University law professor Tyler Ochoa.

Partial verdict in Oracle-Google case seen as setback for Oracle
Los Angeles Times
But overall Google still has a few ways it can win this case," said Tyler Ochoa, professor at the High Technology Law Institute at Santa Clara University

Mixed Verdict in Oracle v. Google Lawsuit
KQED
"This keeps alive the possibility of a big victory in favor of Oracle," Tyler Ochoa, a professor at the Santa Clara University School of Law,
 

Google guilty of infringement in Oracle trial; future legal …
Ars Technica
"Other people will be deterred from using Java as the basis for some non-standard thing