- Antitrust officials also mull making Google share search data
- Justice Department proposes multiple options in historic case
The
Antitrust enforcers are weighing a breakup to mitigate the
The Justice Department “is considering behavioral and structural remedies that would prevent Google from using products such as Chrome, Play, and Android to advantage Google search and Google search-related products and features,” the agency said.
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The 32-page document lays out a framework of potential options for the judge to consider as the case moves to the remedy phase. The agency said it will provide a fuller proposal on remedies next month and then begin gathering additional documents and evidence from Google for a two-week remedies hearing in April. Mehta said he will rule on the remedies by August 2025.
WATCH: The DOJ says it may push to force Google to sell off parts of its operations. Annabelle Droulers reports. Source: Bloomberg
The effort is the most significant move to rein in a major tech company over illegal monopolization since Washington unsuccessfully sought to break up
Google shares fell as much as 2.8% Wednesday and were down 1.6% to $162.98 at 10:22 am in New York trading.
Antitrust pressure from multiple cases is building against Google. Mehta
A breakup of the company “is unlikely at this point despite the antitrust swirls,” said
WATCH: US regulators are considering breaking up Google following a landmark antitrust ruling. Alex Morgan explains the company is facing competition claims on multiple fronts. Source: Bloomberg
The case is part of a larger US crackdown on technology giants. The Justice Department earlier this year sued
The DOJ said in the filing that Google gained scale and data benefits from its illegal distribution agreements with other tech companies that made its search engine the default option on smartphones and web browsers. Google’s Android business encompasses the operating system used on smartphones and devices as well as apps.
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The Justice Department also said it may seek a requirement that Google allow websites more ability to opt out of its artificial intelligence products. The agency said it’s considering proposals related to Google’s dominance over search text ads, such as requirements that the company provide more information and control to advertisers over where their ads appear. The department may also request that Google be restricted from investing in search competitors or potential rivals.
Google criticized the Justice Department’s filing as “radical,” saying it would have “significant unintended consequences for consumers, businesses, and American competitiveness.”
The DOJ’s proposals go “well beyond the legal scope of the Court’s decision about Search distribution contracts,” Lee-Anne Mulholland, Google’s vice president of regulatory affairs, wrote in a blog post.
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European Union watchdogs similarly touted the option of a breakup of Google’s business in order to appease antitrust concerns last year. The bloc’s competition chief
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A group of US states that sued Google over its search monopoly separately from the Justice Department said they may seek to have the tech giant pay for a public education campaign about how to switch search engines.
On Monday, a different federal judge
Last month, the Justice Department and Google faced off in a third antitrust suit focused on the company’s dominance over the technology used to buy and sell online display ads. Closing arguments in that lawsuit are scheduled for late November and Judge
(Updates with timing for a decision in fourth paragraph, shares in sixth.)
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Peter Blumberg, Amy Thomson
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