News

The judge rejected the Justice Department's effort to force Google to sell its popular Chrome browser, concluding the request ...
A federal judge ruled against breaking up Google, but is barring it from making exclusive deals to make its search engine the ...
Google will have to give up search data to competitors but can keep Chrome and Android, a federal judge ruled in the landmark antitrust case.
Google is barred from having exclusive contracts for its search, Chrome, Google Assistant, and Gemini app products, but doesn't have to sell Chrome.
A federal judge in the DOJ antitrust case ruled that Google must share its search data and end its use of exclusive contracts.
Just earlier this year, the US DOJ came in hot arguing "Google must divest the Chrome browser", and accusing it of dominance ...
DC District Court Judge Amit Mehta has ruled that Google doesn't have to give up the Chrome browser to mitigate its illegal monopoly in online search. The court will only require a handful of modest ...
The highly watched decision came after Google and the government proposed ways to fix the tech giant's monopoly over online ...
That shift comes down to generative AI. At the liability trial, no one saw chatbots as a threat. Today, tens of millions use ChatGPT, Claude, or Perplexity to search for information they once typed ...
Google will not have to sell its Chrome browser in order to address its illegal monopoly in online search, DC District Court ...
The European Commission on Friday fined Google $3.455 billion for violating the European Union's anti-competitive practices ...
Both tech giants bring powerful, feature-packed browsers to the table, but only one can dominate your digital life. We break ...