Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

CrazyFlux.comCrazyFlux.com

Tech News

Google to court: we’ll change our Apple deal, but please let us keep Chrome

The Google logo on a shield with a gavel in front of it.
Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images

After its victory against Google in an antitrust trial earlier this year, the Department of Justice recently proposed a sweeping set of changes its search business. The DOJ put a lot on the table, demanding that Google sell its Chrome browser, syndicate its search results, and avoid exclusive deals with companies like Apple for default search placement. It even kept open the possibility of forcing an Android sale.

Now, Google has responded with a far simpler proposal: prohibit those default placement deals, and only for three years.

A court found Google liable for unlawfully monopolizing online search, and its remedies are supposed to reset the market, letting rivals fairly compete. Google (obviously) disagrees that it’s running a monopoly, but before it can appeal that underlying conclusion, it’s trying to limit the fallout if it loses.

Google’s justification is that search deals were at the heart of the case, so they’re what a court should target. Under the proposal, Google couldn’t enter deals with Android phone manufacturers that require adding mobile search in exchange for access to other Google apps. It couldn’t require phone makers to exclude rival search engines or…

Read the full story at The Verge.

You May Also Like

World News

Post Content

Editor's Pick

Walter Olson Voters in ten or so states this month turned down proposals to change the way elections are held, and reformers will be...

World News

Mainstream economists today examine economic phenomena from a “black box” perspective in which they look at inputs and outputs without trying to understand causal...

Editor's Pick

In a truncated trading week, the Indian equities closed the week with gains thanks to a robust technical rebound that it witnessed on Friday....