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The Department of Justice (DOJ) won its second major antitrust case against Google on Thursday. The U.S. District Court for ...
The US government hasn’t broken up a company since AT&T in 1982. Now it’s trying to persuade a judge to make Alphabet Inc.’s ...
Alphabet's Google needs strong measures imposed on it to prevent it from using its artificial intelligence products to extend ...
The outcome of the trial could fundamentally reshape the internet by unseating Google as the go-to portal for information online.
In the latest phase of the major antitrust trial that began on Monday, government lawyer David Dahlquist argued that Google ...
The government argues Chrome gives Google an unfair edge by directing users to Google Search by default. With around 66 ...
Google believes it’s the only company that can operate Chrome, the world’s most popular web browser, and that it would suffer ...
The Justice Department’s historic bid to break up Google’s monopoly over online search kicked off Monday – as the feds tried to persuade a judge that any antitrust must prevent the Big Tech giant ...
The Department of Justice asked a judge to force Google to divest Chrome as part of its antitrust case.
Why did the Department of Justice raise an antitrust lawsuit against Google? Well, the DOJ will try to prove that Google violated the anti-monopoly law. Google has a number of exclusive agreements ...
The judge who found that the tech company maintained an illegal monopoly is asked to force it to sell its Chrome web browser.
Testifying in the Google Search antitrust trial yesterday, Chrome general manager Parisa Tabriz said Chrome’s features and ...
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