US government moves to dismantle Google

UNITED STATES VS. GOOGLE This photo, taken in New York, Monday, Sept. 11, 2023, shows various Google logos when searched on Google. The US government is taking aim, Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2023, in federal court at what has been an indomitable empire: Google’s ubiquitous search engine that has become the internet’s main gateway. / AP
UNITED STATES VS. GOOGLE This photo, taken in New York, Monday, Sept. 11, 2023, shows various Google logos when searched on Google. The US government is taking aim, Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2023, in federal court at what has been an indomitable empire: Google’s ubiquitous search engine that has become the internet’s main gateway. / AP

GOOGLE will confront a threat to its dominant search engine when United States federal regulators launch an attempt to dismantle its internet empire in the biggest U.S. antitrust trial in a quarter century.

Over the next 10 weeks, federal lawyers and state attorneys general will try to prove Google rigged the market in its favor by locking its search engine in as the default choice in a plethora of places and devices.

U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta likely won’t issue a ruling until early 2024. If he decides Google broke the law, another trial will decide what steps should be taken to rein in the Mountain View, California-based company.

Top executives at Google and its corporate parent Alphabet Inc., as well as those from other powerful technology companies are expected to testify. Among them is likely to be Alphabet chief executive officer Sundar Pichai, who succeeded Google co-founder Larry Page four years ago.

Court documents also suggest that Eddy Cue, a high-ranking Apple executive, might be called to the stand.

The Justice Department filed its antitrust lawsuit against Google nearly three years ago during the Trump administration, charging that the company has used its internet search dominance to gain an unfair advantage against competitors.

Government lawyers allege that Google protects its franchise through a form of payola, shelling out billions of dollars annually to be the default search engine on the iPhone and on web browsers such as Apple’s Safari and Mozilla’s Firefox.

Regulators also charge that Google has illegally rigged the market in its favor by requiring its search engine to be bundled with its Android software for smartphones if the device manufacturers want full access to the Android app store.

Google counters that it faces a wide range of competition despite commanding about 90 percent of the internet search market. Its rivals, Google argues, range from search engines such as Microsoft’s Bing to websites like Amazon and Yelp, where consumers can post questions about what to buy or where to go.

From Google’s perspective, perpetual improvements to its search engine explain why people almost reflexively keep coming back to it, a habit that long ago made “Googling” synonymous with looking things up on the internet.

The trial begins just a couple weeks after the 25th anniversary of the first investment in the company — a $100,000 check written by Sun Microsystems co-founder Andy Bechtolsheim that enabled Page and Sergey Brin to set up shop in a Silicon Valley garage.

Today, Google’s corporate parent, Alphabet, is worth $1.7 trillion and employs 182,000 people, with most of the money coming from $224 billion in annual ad sales flowing through a network of digital services anchored by a search engine that fields billions of queries a day. (AP)

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