Two Bay Area lawyers have been trying to visit the 600 women who are now in federal prisons across the country after the ...
The U.S. Department of Justice argued Wednesday that Google should divest its Chrome browser to help break up the company’s illegal monopoly in online search, according to a filing with the U.S ...
Officials from the Department of Justice, in a Wednesday filing, urged District Judge Amit Mehta to force Google to sell its Chrome browser. The recommendations are the finalized proposal by the ...
The Department of Justice (DOJ) is asking a federal judge to order Google to sell off its Chrome browser after the court found the tech giant maintained an illegal monopoly over online search.
The Justice Department wants Google's empire to be broken up, but it has to convince a judge that should happen first. The process started late Wednesday when US prosecutors submitted a document ...
The Justice Department is seeking to force Google to sell off its Chrome browser and make other major changes to remedy its illegal search monopoly, prosecutors told a Washington court Wednesday ...
Corrections & clarifications: This story has been updated to reflect the U.S. Department of Justice is reportedly aiming to force a sale of Google Chrome. The U.S. Department of Justice aims to ...
Update, November 21st: One day after Bloomberg’s initial report, it’s now official: The Department of Justice has requested that the judge in the antitrust case order Google to divest itself ...
The Justice Department Wednesday night asked a federal judge to order Google to sell off its popular Chrome browser and, potentially, its Android mobile operating system to level the playing field ...
The U.S. Department of Justice said Alphabet's Google should sell off its Chrome browser, following an August court ruling that the tech giant holds an illegal monopoly in the search market.
Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. and Juniper Networks Inc. representatives met with Justice Department antitrust enforcers last week in a final effort to persuade the agency not to challenge their ...