Google CEO Sundar Pichai met with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk on February 13, 2025 at Google, a startup campus in Warsaw, Poland, and after a press conference, the image)
Jakub Porzycki | nuphoto | Getty Images
alphabet Stocks accounted for 8% in expanded trading as investors celebrated what they considered a minimal result from their historic defeat in last year’s groundbreaking antitrust incident.
Last year, Google was found to have an illegal monopoly in the core markets of internet search.
US District Judge Amit Metah opposed the most serious consequences proposed by the Department of Justice, including forced sales of Google’s Chrome browser, which provides data that helps the advertising business deliver targeted ads.
“Google does not have to sell Chrome, and the court will not include an accidental sale of the Android operating system in its final judgment,” the decision states. “The plaintiffs were overflowing with demand for mandatory sales of these important assets, but Google did not use it to bring about illegal binding.”
Mehta, who oversaw the relief trial in May, ordered the parties to meet for the final sentence by September 10th.
In August 2024, the District of Columbia US District Court held that Google violated Section 2 of the Sherman Act and held an exclusive on searches and related advertising.
The antitrust exam began in September 2023.
“The court currently places restrictions on how Google services are distributed, requiring that you share your search data with your rivals,” Google said in a blog post. “There are concerns about how these requirements will affect users and their privacy and we are closely considering the decision. The court recognized that selling Chrome and Android was focused on search distribution and hurting consumers and partners.”
One key area of focus was the exclusive agreements held by Google for distribution.
In its decision on Tuesday, Mehta said the company could pay for preloads of its products, but it cannot exclusively sign up for terms or licenses.
DOJ asked Google to stop practicing “forced syndication.” This refers to the practice of conducting specific transactions with companies to ensure that search engines are the default choice for browsers and smartphones.
“Today’s court ruling recognizes the need for a remedy that will pry the market for popular search services that has been frozen for over a decade,” the DOJ said in a press release. “The ruling also recognizes the need to prevent the use of the same anti-competitive tactics Google uses to monopolize the search market, and the remedy will reach Genai technology and businesses.”
Google will be the default search engine for iPhone, where Apple pays billions of dollars a year. It’s an advantage for Apple and a valuable way for Google to gain more search volume and users.
Apple Stock rose 4% after opening hours on Tuesday.
“Google will not prohibit Google from making payments or provide other considerations to its distribution partners due to Google’s search, preloading or placing Chrome or its Genai products. Reducing payments from Google almost certainly will be a wide range of areas that counter the widespread payment ban (in some cases, it will damage distribution partners, related markets, and consumers.”
Google has been ordered to relax the hold on search data.
At the Remedies Trial in May, the DOJ asked the judge to force Google to use data to generate search results, such as data about what users click.
Mehta ruled on Tuesday that Google should make certain search index data and user interaction data available, despite being “not ad data.”
Google does not need to share or provide detailed data access with advertisers.
The court has said it must narrow down the datasets Google needs to share and that it must occur under “normal commercial conditions that match Google’s current syndication services.”
Google and Apple’s daily stock chart.
