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Google, Justice Department face off in climactic showdown in search monopoly case

Google, Justice Department face off in climactic showdown in search monopoly case
MITROPOULOS EXPLAINS. LOOKING FOR DIRECTIONS A RESTAURANT, OR MAYBE A HISTORY LESSON? THESE DAYS, MOST PEOPLE WON’T HEAD TO THEIR LOCAL LIBRARY. JUST PULL OUT YOUR PHONE OR YOUR COMPUTER AND SEARCH AWAY. I USUALLY TYPE IN SOMETHING AND IT WILL EVEN AUTOFILL WHAT I’M LOOKING FOR AND I’M LIKE, WOW, LIKE YOU READ MY MIND. MAYBE. AND IF YOU’RE LOOKING SOMETHING UP, MOST PEOPLE WILL TELL YOU THEY’RE GOING TO ONE PLACE. WHAT SEARCH ENGINE DO YOU NORMALLY USE? GOOGLE. GOOGLE? I USUALLY USE GOOGLE. IT’S THE EASIEST. IT’S SET UP READY TO GO. IT MAY BE EASY, BUT IN A MASSIVE FEDERAL RULING ON MONDAY, A JUDGE SAID THAT GOOGLE VIOLATED ANTITRUST LAW AND HAS BEEN ILLEGALLY MONOPOLIZING OR CONTROLLING ONLINE SEARCHING. WHAT THE CASE FOCUSED ON WAS GOOGLE’S DECISION TO OFFER HUGE SUMS OF MONEY TO ANDROID, TO APPLE IN ORDER TO MAKE SURE THAT ANYBODY THAT HAS ONE OF THOSE PHONES, WHEN THEY TURN IT ON, THEY TAKE IT OUT OF THE BOX. THE FIRST THING THEY SEE WHEN THEY GO TO SEARCH THE WEB IS GOOGLE. AND IF YOU WANT TO THINK ABOUT SOME OF THE OTHER EFFECTS THAT GOOGLE’S MONOPOLIZING HAS HAD ON SEARCHING, JUST THINK ABOUT WHAT WE SAY WHEN WE NEED TO LOOK SOMETHING UP. LET ME GOOGLE THAT. IF YOU HAVE ONLY ONE DOMINANT PLAYER, THEN CONSUMERS HAVE TO USE THAT SERVICE. NEW HAMPSHIRE’S ATTORNEY GENERAL’S OFFICE HAVE BEEN AMONG THE TOP LAWYERS FROM ACROSS THE COUNTRY, BEHIND THE CASE. THEY SAY THIS IS ABOUT MAKING SURE THERE’S COMPETITION AND THEREFORE CHOICES FOR USERS. THE MORE CHOICES CONSUMERS HAVE, THE BETTER THE MARKETPLACE IS, THE BETTER IT IS FOR CONSUMERS, THE BETTER IT IS FOR BUSINESSES. THE BETTER IT IS FOR EVERYBODY. AND WHILE GOOGLE STILL SEEMS TO BE PEOPLE’S MOST POPULAR CHOICE, OTHERS WERE ALREADY AHEAD OF THE CURVE ON OTHER OPTIONS. WHAT DO YOU PRIMARILY USE AS YOUR SEARCH ENGINE? DUCK, DUCK GO
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Updated: 5:34 AM CDT May 30, 2025
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Google, Justice Department face off in climactic showdown in search monopoly case
AP logo
Updated: 5:34 AM CDT May 30, 2025
Editorial Standards
Google will return to federal court Friday to fend off the U.S. Justice Department's attempt to topple its internet empire at the same time it's navigating a pivotal shift to artificial intelligence that could undercut its power.The legal and technological threats facing Google are among the key issues that will be dissected during the closing arguments of a legal proceeding that will determine the changes imposed upon the company in the wake of its dominant search engine being declared as an illegal monopoly by U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta last year.Brandishing evidence presented during a recent three-week stretch of hearings, Justice Department lawyers will attempt to persuade Mehta to order a radical shake-up that includes a ban on Google paying to lock its search engine in as the default on smart devices and an order requiring the company to sell its Chrome browser.Google lawyers are expected to assert only minor concessions are needed, especially as the upheaval triggered by advances in artificial intelligence already are reshaping the search landscape, as alternative, conversational search options are rolling out from AI startups that are hoping to use the Department of Justice's four-and-half-year-old case to gain the upper hand in the next technological frontier.“Over weeks of testimony, we heard from a series of well-funded companies eager to gain access to Google’s technology so they don’t have to innovate themselves,” Lee-Anne Mulholland, Google's vice president of regulatory affairs, wrote in a blog post earlier this month. “What we didn’t hear was how DOJ’s extreme proposals would benefit consumers.”After the day-long closing arguments, Mehta will spend much of the summer mulling a decision that he plans to issue before Labor Day. Google has already vowed to appeal the ruling that branded its search engine as a monopoly, a step it can't take until the judge orders a remedy.While both sides of this showdown agree that AI is an inflection point for the industry's future, they have disparate views on how the shift will affect Google.The Justice Department contends that AI technology by itself won't rein in Google's power, arguing additional legal restraints must be slapped on a search engine that's the main reason its parent company, Alphabet Inc., is valued at $2 trillion.Google has already been deploying AI to transform its search engine into an answer engine, an effort that has so far helped maintain its perch as the internet's main gateway despite inroads being made by alternatives from the likes of OpenAI and Perplexity.The Justice Department contends a divestiture of the Chrome browser that Google CEO Sundar Pichai helped build nearly 20 years ago would be among the most effective countermeasures against Google continuing to amass massive volumes of browser traffic and personal data that could be leveraged to retain its dominance in the AI era. Executives from both OpenAI and Perplexity testified last month that they would be eager bidders for the Chrome browser if Mehta orders its sale.The debate over Google's fate also has pulled in opinions from Apple, mobile app developers, legal scholars and startups.Apple, which collects more than $20 billion annually to make Google the default search engine on the iPhone and its other devices, filed briefs arguing against the Justice Department's proposed 10-year ban on such lucrative lock-in agreements. Apple told the judge that prohibiting the contracts would deprive the company of money that it funnels into its own research, and that the ban might even make Google even more powerful because the company would be able to hold onto its money while consumers would end up choosing its search engine anyway. The Cupertino, California, company also told the judge a ban wouldn't compel it to build its own search engine to compete against Google.In other filings, a group of legal scholars said the Justice Department's proposed divestiture of Chrome would be an improper penalty that would inject unwarranted government interference in a company's business. Meanwhile, former Federal Trade Commission officials James Cooper and Andrew Stivers warned that another proposal that would require Google to share its data with rival search engines “does not account for the expectations users have developed over time regarding the privacy, security, and stewardship” of their personal information.The App Association, a group that represents mostly small software developers, also advised Mehta not to adopt the Justice Department's proposed changes because of the ripple effects they would have across the tech industry.Hobbling Google in the way the Justice Department envisions would make it more difficult for startups to realize their goal of being acquired, the App Association wrote. “Developers will be overcome by uncertainty” if Google is torn apart, the group argues.Buy Y Combinator, an incubator that has helped create hundreds of startups collectively worth about $800 billion filed documents pushing for the dramatic overhaul of Google, whose immense power has discouraged venture capitalists from investing in areas that are considered to be part of the company's “kill zone.”Startups “also need to be able to get their products into the hands of users, free from restrictive dealing and self-preferencing that locks up important distribution channels. As things stand, Google has locked up the most critical distribution channels, freezing the general search and search text advertising markets into static competition for more than a decade,” Y Combinator told Mehta.

Google will return to federal court Friday to fend off the U.S. Justice Department's attempt to topple its internet empire at the same time it's navigating a pivotal shift to artificial intelligence that could undercut its power.

The legal and technological threats facing Google are among the key issues that will be dissected during the closing arguments of a legal proceeding that will determine the changes imposed upon the company in the wake of its dominant search engine being declared as an illegal monopoly by U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta last year.

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Brandishing evidence presented during a recent three-week stretch of hearings, Justice Department lawyers will attempt to persuade Mehta to order a radical shake-up that includes a ban on Google paying to lock its search engine in as the default on smart devices and an order requiring the company to sell its Chrome browser.

Google lawyers are expected to assert only minor concessions are needed, especially as the upheaval triggered by advances in artificial intelligence already are reshaping the search landscape, as alternative, conversational search options are rolling out from AI startups that are hoping to use the Department of Justice's four-and-half-year-old case to gain the upper hand in the next technological frontier.

“Over weeks of testimony, we heard from a series of well-funded companies eager to gain access to Google’s technology so they don’t have to innovate themselves,” Lee-Anne Mulholland, Google's vice president of regulatory affairs, wrote earlier this month. “What we didn’t hear was how DOJ’s extreme proposals would benefit consumers.”

After the day-long closing arguments, Mehta will spend much of the summer mulling a decision that he plans to issue before Labor Day. Google has already vowed to appeal the ruling that branded its search engine as a monopoly, a step it can't take until the judge orders a remedy.

While both sides of this showdown agree that AI is an inflection point for the industry's future, they have disparate views on how the shift will affect Google.

The Justice Department contends that AI technology by itself won't rein in Google's power, arguing additional legal restraints must be slapped on a search engine that's the main reason its parent company, Alphabet Inc., is valued at $2 trillion.

Google has already been deploying AI to transform its search engine into an answer engine, an effort that has so far helped maintain its perch as the internet's main gateway despite inroads being made by alternatives from the likes of OpenAI and Perplexity.

The Justice Department contends a divestiture of the Chrome browser that Google CEO Sundar Pichai helped build nearly 20 years ago would be among the most effective countermeasures against Google continuing to amass massive volumes of browser traffic and personal data that could be leveraged to retain its dominance in the AI era. Executives from both OpenAI and Perplexity testified last month that they would be eager bidders for the Chrome browser if Mehta orders its sale.

The debate over Google's fate also has pulled in opinions from Apple, mobile app developers, legal scholars and startups.

Apple, which collects more than $20 billion annually to make Google the default search engine on the iPhone and its other devices, filed briefs arguing against the Justice Department's proposed 10-year ban on such lucrative lock-in agreements. Apple told the judge that prohibiting the contracts would deprive the company of money that it funnels into its own research, and that the ban might even make Google even more powerful because the company would be able to hold onto its money while consumers would end up choosing its search engine anyway. The Cupertino, California, company also told the judge a ban wouldn't compel it to build its own search engine to compete against Google.

In other filings, a group of legal scholars said the Justice Department's proposed divestiture of Chrome would be an improper penalty that would inject unwarranted government interference in a company's business. Meanwhile, former Federal Trade Commission officials James Cooper and Andrew Stivers warned that another proposal that would require Google to share its data with rival search engines “does not account for the expectations users have developed over time regarding the privacy, security, and stewardship” of their personal information.

The App Association, a group that represents mostly small software developers, also advised Mehta not to adopt the Justice Department's proposed changes because of the ripple effects they would have across the tech industry.

Hobbling Google in the way the Justice Department envisions would make it more difficult for startups to realize their goal of being acquired, the App Association wrote. “Developers will be overcome by uncertainty” if Google is torn apart, the group argues.

Buy Y Combinator, an incubator that has helped create hundreds of startups collectively worth about $800 billion filed documents pushing for the dramatic overhaul of Google, whose immense power has discouraged venture capitalists from investing in areas that are considered to be part of the company's “kill zone.”

Startups “also need to be able to get their products into the hands of users, free from restrictive dealing and self-preferencing that locks up important distribution channels. As things stand, Google has locked up the most critical distribution channels, freezing the general search and search text advertising markets into static competition for more than a decade,” Y Combinator told Mehta.

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