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I may not have mentioned this yet (I'm pretty sure I mentioned it in one of my first PC Gamer articles) but I have a law degree. That has made me love the minutia of the legal system but also keenly aware of how complicated and drawn out it can all get. Though the United States' enforcement of anti-trust principles as of late is likely better for the consumer and broader market, the latest hearing isn't the end of the case.
United States v. Google LLC (1:20-cv-03010) began proceedings in October 2020 and was decided in August of this year. This is a different case from the confusingly titled United States v. Google LLC (1:23-cv-00108), which started in 2023, and had its closing arguments in November 2024.
The latter case is specifically about Google's control and alleged monopoly over its advertising, whereas the former is about its search engine. Through deals with companies like Apple to be the default search engine on the iPhone and Google's ownership of the popular mobile OS Android, Google has become the search engine giant it is today.
There's a reason why it's a popular joke to jokingly insult the 'five users of Bing' or how behind the market Microsoft's Edge is. That browser is known as the app you use to get Chrome, then never touch it again. In fact, Windows periodically sends reminders that 'you can just use Edge, you know?' and yet many don't. I write this typing on Google Docs, through Google Chrome, so maybe I'm part of the problem.
Fundamentally, most browsers aren't too dissimilar from each other—yet Chrome holds almost 70% of the market share on a consistent basis. This lawsuit took aim at the browser, and after years of deliberation, the DOJ has proposed that Google be forced to sell Chrome, alongside a few other efforts to stop Google from further monopolising the market.
Judge Amit Mehta, who presides over the case, has ruled that Google acted illegally to
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