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VisitGoogle's response to DOJ antitrust measures by March 2025
Full compliance • 25%
Partial compliance • 25%
Legal appeal • 25%
Negotiated settlement • 25%
Official statements or press releases from Google
DOJ Asks Judge Mehta to Order Google to Sell Chrome Browser in Antitrust Crackdown
Nov 19, 2024, 03:24 AM
Top antitrust officials at the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) have decided to ask federal judge Amit Mehta to force Alphabet Inc.'s Google to sell off its Chrome web browser, according to a report by Bloomberg News. This move follows a previous ruling by Judge Mehta that Google holds an illegal monopoly over the internet search market. The DOJ's proposed measures aim to break Google's dominance in search and include data licensing agreements, allowing websites to opt out of artificial intelligence (AI) use, and potentially uncoupling Google's Android operating system from its search and Google Play services. Google has responded by stating that the DOJ's proposals would harm consumers and developers.
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Accepts remedies • 25%
Negotiates terms • 25%
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Other • 25%
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Settlement reached • 25%
Complies with all demands • 25%
Partially complies • 25%
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Agrees to unbundle Android • 25%
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Rejects proposal and appeals • 25%
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Focus on non-search products • 25%
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Chrome divestiture • 25%
Android divestiture • 25%
Both divestitures • 25%
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Breakup of Google • 25%
End of exclusive agreements • 25%
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Chrome sold • 25%
Android uncoupled • 25%