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DC District Court Judge Amit Mehta has ruled that Google doesn't have to give up the Chrome browser to mitigate its illegal ...
Google is barred from having exclusive contracts for its search, Chrome, Google Assistant, and Gemini app products, but doesn ...
Google doesn't have to sell its wildly popular Chrome web browser, but it can't engage in exclusive search deals, US District ...
Between 50 and 100 million Windows users have switched browsers in recent weeks, just as Microsoft reveals its new warning to ...
The highly watched decision came after Google and the government proposed ways to fix the tech giant's monopoly over online ...
Judge Amit P. Mehta rejected the Justice Department’s call to break up Google, listing remedies for his finding last year ...
A federal judge in the DOJ antitrust case ruled that Google must share its search data and end its use of exclusive contracts.
A court will not force Google to sell off its Chrome browser or Android, a federal judge said in a court filing on Tuesday.
A federal judge’s remedy stops short of making meaningful changes to how we use our phones, computers and the web.
A federal judge ordered Google to hand over its search results and data to rival companies in a landmark antitrust case ...
Both tech giants bring powerful, feature-packed browsers to the table, but only one can dominate your digital life. We break ...
On the operating system front, the Justice Department wanted Google to sell Chrome and the option to spin-off Android if other remedies did not work.