In 2013 the State of Georgia, specifically the Georgia Code Revision Commission, threatened to sue
Carl Malamud for copyright infringement over the posting of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated on the website
Public.Resource.Org. In 2015, the State of Georgia filed a copyright infringement lawsuit in the U.S. District Court, Northern District of Georgia. The State of Georgia claimed a copyright in the Code, and that Carl Malamud and Public.Resource.Org had violated that copyright. Public.Resource.Org claimed that since the state has chosen to make the Official Code of Georgia Annotated the official and authoritative code of the entire state, the Code should not be subject to copyright law, and should be freely available for all citizens to read and access. The Code also holds, in denoting the
annotated code as the "official code," that authorship and copyright remains with the State and not with the publisher. In October 2018, the
United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit held that the Official Code of Georgia, Annotated, is not copyrightable. appealed this decision to the
United States Supreme Court. The Court heard the oral arguments on December 2, 2019. The case,
Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, Inc., decided the question:Whether the
government edicts doctrine extends to – and thus renders uncopyrightable – works that lack the force of law, such as the annotations in the Official Code of Georgia Annotated. In April 2020, the Supreme Court of the United States affirmed the appeals court ruling by holding that the code annotations were ineligible for copyright protection. == Titles ==