DOJ’s wildly overbroad proposal goes miles beyond the Court’s decision. It would break a range of Google products — even beyond Search — that people love and find helpful in their everyday lives,
Google must promptly and fully divest Chrome, to a buyer approved by the Plaintiffs in their sole discretion, subject to terms that the Court and Plaintiffs approve,
We believe Google's default search placements via contractual agreements represent 50%+ of Google's US search queries,
Divestiture is a more effective remedy,
Look, Google has got a lot of power. They’ve been bad to me…”
The end result here is not dissimilar from the Microsoft court’s conclusion as to the browser market,
Consistent with the Court’s scheduling order governing remedy proceedings, Plaintiffs will file a Revised PFJ on March 7, 2025,
We have had such mixed messages from the Trump cohort,
These remedies will have an impact,
The spin-off of Chrome is possible but an uphill battle,
Restoring competition to the markets for general search and search text advertising as they exist today will require reactivating the competitive process that Google has long stifled.
Chrome is not a stand-alone business,
This may be one of the dumbest moves ever,
Google maintains Chromium for quite a few other ISAs. Google doesn't necessarily make money off of chromium, so forcing them to sell means you essentially kill it and Google forks their own version of Chrome to stop building for the ecosystem,
As just one example, the DOJ's proposal would literally require us to install not one but two separate choice screens before you could access Google Search on a [Google] Pixel phone you bought,
Undoing Google's overlapping and widespread illegal conduct over more than a decade requires more than contract restrictions: it requires a range of remedies to create enduring competition,
The court reaches the following conclusion: Google is a monopolist, and it has acted as one to maintain its monopoly,
Google’s unlawful behavior has deprived rivals not only of critical distribution channels but also distribution partners who could otherwise enable entry into these markets by competitors in new and innovative ways,
It is probably going a little beyond,
What you can do without breaking it up is make sure it’s more fair,