Earlier this year, Google lost a massive antitrust lawsuit filed by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). Now the tech giant could be forced to sell off Google Chrome, the most popular web browser in the world.
According to sources speaking to Bloomberg, the DOJ reportedly intends to recommend that Google be ordered to sell off its Chrome browser as a remedy in its significant antitrust lawsuit. In said suit, U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta found that Google had engaged in anticompetitive practices through its exclusive distribution agreements with other tech companies.
SEE ALSO: 'Google is a monopolist’: Google loses huge antitrust case over searchSuch agreements ensured its Google search engine was the default option on the vast majority of desktop and mobile devices in the country. Web analytics service StatCounter states that Google currently enjoys 89 percent of the global search engine market share. This number jumps even further to 93 percent when solely looking at mobile devices.
In previous years, Google has paid Apple up to $200 billion per annum to guarantee that it is the default search engine in the latter's Safari web browser. Safari is the pre-installed default browser on every Apple iPhone, iPad, and Mac. Such deals are unlikely to be permitted in the future.
"Google is a monopolist, and it has acted as one to maintain its monopoly," Mehta wrote in his August opinion.
Google has said it plans to appeal the ruling.
If Mehta does order Google to divest from Chrome, it would be a massive blow to the tech giant. Chrome commands almost 67 percent of the global web browser market share, as per StatCounter. The second most popular browser is Safari with just 18 percent.
The loss of its Chrome browser isn't the only painful consequence Google could potentially see from this antitrust crackdown. Bloomberg reports that the DOJ will also request measures regarding Google's Android operating system and artificial intelligence, as well as concerning data licensing requirements.
Specifically, the DOJ will reportedly recommend that Google be ordered to unbundle its Android mobile operating system from its other products, offering it to clients separately from other services such as Google Search and the Google Play store. (Fortunately for the tech giant, the DOJ no longer appears to be pushing for it to sell off Android altogether.) The DOJ will further propose that Google be ordered to provide websites more options for opting out of having their content used by its AI, licence the data from its search engine, and give advertisers more control regarding where their ads appear.
The courts could deem a Chrome selloff unnecessary if such measures are enough to create a more competitive market. If they aren't, then Google may lose Chrome in one of the U.S.' largest antitrust crackdowns in history.
Bloomberg's report follows the DOJ's proposed remedy framework filed in October. Barring Google's appeal, a final ruling in this antitrust case is expected in August next year.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Google could be forced to sell Chrome browser by DOJ antitrust lawsuit-乱作一团网
sitemap
文章
956
浏览
31
获赞
7445
The summoning circle meme calls upon your deepest, darkest desires
If you could request anyone and anything, what would it be?The new "summoning circle" meme has TwittApple's iPhone might completely lose the notch in 2024
In the last decade or so, smartphone manufacturers have been obsessed by reducing phone bezels and tHow NFC tags save me time
I refuse to have a smart home for many reasons, the most important of which is that I watched the DiHow researchers are still using AI to predict crime
Scientists are looking for a way to predict crime using, you guessed it, artificial intelligence.TheMia Farrow's Twitter account is joyfully bizarre
Stream of consciousness writing made for great 20th century fiction, and now it's coming for 21st ceHow to edit an iMessage in iOS 16
iPhone users, get ready to say goodbye to texting typos forever. With the latest iOS 16 software updHow to watch Apple's WWDC 2022 event
Better rest and relax now while you can. Another big Apple news dump is just a few days away.Apple&rGoogle's Arts & Culture app lets you browse artworks from more than 1,000 museums
You probably didn't know you needed yet another Google app on your smartphone, but if you're an artApple could debut its new laptop chip in a Macbook Pro this year
A few weeks after Apple announced it would start developing its own silicon chip for Mac computers,WhatsApp rolls out new privacy features, among other updates
WhatsAppannounced Wednesday that it’ll be rolling out new privacy features giving users more cApple is looking into giving Apple Watch a camera
One of the first smartwatches to hit the market, Samsung's Galaxy Gear, had an integrated camera. It10 iPhone settings to save time
Your iPhone already saves you a ton of time with its marvellous multitasking functionality, removingChunky baby seal born in Japan. Look at him, love him.
There is never a bad time to look at a cute baby animal, so please enjoy this adorable seal.The littGoogle TV is adding 50 free live channels. Here's the list.
If you use Android TV's successor Google TV, brace yourself: 50 free live channels are on their way.Kid loses his stuffed elephant, so photoshoppers give him a trip around the world
For a little kid, there are few more tragic losses than when a treasured stuffed animal goes missing