The judge rejected the Justice Department's effort to force Google to sell its popular Chrome browser, concluding the request was a bridge too far.
A federal judge ruled against breaking up Google, but is barring it from making exclusive deals to make its search engine the ...
Judge Amit P. Mehta's opinion emphasizes how the rise of AI search has opened new competitive possibilities and saved Google from the DOJ's most onerous requests.
The ruling in the Google antitrust trial has led to a host of hard-to-answer questions about the future of Google's search ...
The US Department of Justice had demanded that Google sell Chrome - Tuesday's decision means the tech giant can keep it but ...
Google will have to give up search data to competitors but can keep Chrome and Android, a federal judge ruled in the landmark ...
Stopping Google’s payments to be the default search engine would impose “substantial” harms, according to the judge.
Google will not have to sell its Chrome browser in order to address its illegal monopoly in online search, DC District Court ...
A federal judge on Tuesday ordered a shake-up of Google's search engine in a crackdown aimed at curbing the corrosive power of an illegal monopoly while rebuffing the U.S. government's attempt to ...
Chrome isn’t going anywhere, and neither are Google’s payments to developers of competing browsers to keep its search engine as their default. The ruling that US District Court Judge Amit P. Mehta ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results