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Google, DOJ
Breaking down the DOJ’s plan to end Google’s search monopoly
The DOJ’s proposals clued in the public to what the government really wants out of Google. Though the complaint was filed in 2020, the first phase of the trial focused only on w
DOJ Seeks To Break Up Google—What This Could Potentially Mean For The Tech Company And Its Employees
The Justice Department is demanding that Google sell off its Chrome browser. Here's how the potential divestiture could have far-reaching consequences for employees.
DOJ asks judge to break up Google
The Department of Justice asked a federal judge Wednesday to force Google to sell off its popular Chrome browser and impose restrictions on how it uses artificial intelligence and its Android mobile operating system in a bid to break up the company’s illegal monopoly over the search engine market.
Tech Matters: DOJ’s move to break up Google Chrome: What it means for you
The U.S. Department of Justice last week proposed in a ruling that Google sell its Chrome browser, arguing that it’s the key to Google’s dominance of the search market. The DOJ’s proposal is one of the most aggressive antitrust measures in recent history,
The DOJ wants to break up Google. It needs to convince a judge first.
US prosecutors submitted a document Wednesday asking for Google's Alphabet parent company to sell off its Chrome browser, among other remedies. Whether that actually happens won't be decided until 2025.
DOJ: Google must sell Chrome to end monopoly
The U.S. Department of Justice argued Wednesday that Google should divest its Chrome browser to help break up the company's illegal monopoly in online
Opinion
What's behind Google's 'break-up' with Chrome
Google may complain the DOJ's remedies are “anti-innovation.” But forward-looking pro-public tech innovation requires more than a slap on the wrist against monopolies.
DOJ may be ready to break up Google. It needs to convince a judge first.
The Justice Department apparently wants Google's empire to be broken up, but it has to convince a judge that should happen first. The process starts Wednesday when US prosecutors are expected to submit a document in federal court outlining specific remedies after successfully arguing in a landmark trial that Google ran its search engine empire as
Google is 'once, twice, three times a monopolist,' says the Justice Department
The U.S. advertising monopoly case against Google wrapped up this week, with both the DOJ and Google giving closing arguments. U.S. lawyers said that Google is "once, twice, three times a monopolist," while Google's lawyers claimed the DOJ proved "the exact opposite" of a monopoly.
Google and the DOJ make their final arguments in the ad tech monopoly case
Many of the arguments were familiar to any Google trial watcher. The DOJ argues Google used a suite of ad tech products, particularly Doubleclick For Publishers (DFP) and the AdX
DOJ wraps up ad tech trial: Google is “three times” a monopolist
Department of Justice lawyer Aaron Teitelbaum kicked things off by telling Brinkema that Google "rigged" ad auctions, allegedly controlling "multiple parts" of services used to place ads all over the Internet,
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on MSN
Justice Department calls for breakup of Google and sale of Chrome
The proposed breakup calls for Google to sell its industry-leading Chrome web browser and impose restrictions designed to ...
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DOJ pushes for Google to break off Chrome browser after antitrust case
The Department of Justice is pushing a federal judge to make Google divest its Chrome internet browser as a remedy following ...
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Google: Why I Am Buying The 'DOJ' Dip
Alphabet Inc.'s valuation is attractive at a P/E ratio of 18.6X, making it one of the cheapest big tech stocks available.
Opinion
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Opinion
Why breaking up Google won’t happen (and why it shouldn’t)
The US Department of Justice is proposing a forced sale of Chrome. The chances of it actually happening? Slim, writes Gordon ...
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