Welcome back to Week in Review. This week, we’re exploring the DOJ telling Google to sell off Chrome to break up its monopoly, OpenAI accidentally deleting potential evidence in The New York ...
Notably, the DOJ has proposed that Google sell off its Chrome web browser—which currently accounts for about two-thirds of the browser market—and stay out of that business for five years.
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 ...
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 ...
The Department of Justice asked a judge this week to break up Google. Chrome? Sell it off. Android? Same. Paying other companies to make Google Search the default? Cut that out. If the DOJ gets ...
If you don't settle for the default browser provided by your operating system, then the first thing you likely do when setting up a new device is to download Google Chrome. It's fast, it's free ...
DOJ's push to force a sale of Chrome seen as an 'over-ask' Trump administration may alter antitrust efforts against Google Chrome's value tied to Google's ad and search business Nov 21 (Reuters ...
Google’s parent company saw its stock fall over 5 percent Thursday morning after the Justice Department said it would try to force a sale of the company’s Chrome web browser, a move that if ...
Now, the Department of Justice is outlining some pretty ambitious goals for those hearings, the most demanding of which would require Google to sell off Chrome. The drama all stems back to Google ...
Last, but certainly not least, the company’s browser, Google Chrome, is what a staggering three billion people use to navigate the Internet. According to some estimates, Google holds nearly ...
Earlier this week it was reported that the US Department of Justice's top antitrust officials would likely ask a judge to enforce a significant break up of Google, in part proposing that Chrome be ...