Under a blockbuster anti-monopoly court ruling on Tuesday over internet search, Google will not be forced to break itself up.
The Mountain View search and digital-advertising giant will not have to sell its wildly popular Chrome browser or globally pervasive Android cell-phone operating system, a federal court judge ruled.
But Google must stop cutting exclusive deals with other companies to make its search engine and other products the only available choices on consumers’ devices.
“Google’s monopoly has endured for more than a decade,” Washington, D.C. federal court Judge Amit Mehta said in his 226-page decision, adding that there has been “little meaningful market entry” to challenge the technology behemoth’s lock on search.
The U.S. Department of Justice, joined by nearly every U.S. state, sued Google in 2020, alleging in a court filing that the company’s search monopoly “caused significant, long-running harm to competition.”
Critics alleged the monopoly allowed the company to degrade search results.
The department and states asked Mehta to issue remedies that would strike deep into Google’s vastly lucrative business selling digital ads in connection with its search engine, a primary driver of profits for its parent company Alphabet that surpassed $100 billion last year. The plaintiffs asked Mehta to make Google sell Chrome, and, if the judge’s remedies failed to eliminate Google’s monopoly, unload Android later. Mehta shot down both proposals.
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However, the judge allowed Google to pay companies to place its Search, Chrome and AI products on devices, including by pre-loading Google products when devices are first sold.
Google will also have to provide certain search and user data to competitors at minimal cost.
The remedies are to last six years, and Mehta said he would adjust them later after hearing from Google and the plaintiffs on certain elements.
Check back on this developing story.
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