DOJ indicates it’s considering Google breakup following monopoly ruling
- The Department of Justice is proposing sanctions against Google to address its monopoly in the search engine market, following a recent ruling by Judge Amit Mehta.
- The DOJ's filing suggests remedies to prevent Google from using its products to maintain its dominance and enhance competition.
- Google plans to appeal the ruling, asserting that it offers superior search quality and faces competition from other platforms.
205 Articles
205 Articles
The break-up of Google was coming
It’s innovative, it generates huge wealth, and it offers great products for completely nothing. The lobbyists for Alphabet, the parent company of Google, will make plenty of familiar arguments about why the internet giant should be left intact. And yet, as the Department of Justice pushes for it to be broken up, it is going to be hard to convince anyone it can carry on as it is. In reality, breaking up Google may be the best thing that has happe…
US Considers Asking Court To Break Up Google As It Weighs Remedies In The Antitrust Case
The U.S. Department of Justice is considering asking a federal judge to break up Google after its ubiquitous search engine was declared an illegal monopoly, but it is just one of many possible remedies under review, according to a court filing. In court papers filed late Tuesday, government lawyers outlined a series of potential remedies it may pursue, including restrictions on how Google’s artificial intelligence mines other websites to deliver…
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