Google Illegally Acted As A Search Monopoly, Judge Rules In Major Case


A federal judge ruled on Monday Google violated antitrust laws in a bid to maintain a monopoly with its search engine—a major loss for Google, capping off the latest antitrust case brought against a U.S. tech giant.

D.C.-based Judge Amit Mehta wrote “Google is a monopolist” and “has acted as one to maintain its monopoly,” in an opinion siding with the Department of Justice and 11 states. In his ruling, Mehta stated Google exercises monopoly power over product markets, uses exclusive distribution agreements and charges “supracompetitive prices for general search text ads,” which Mehta argues has led to “anticompetitive behavior.”

Read more…
Source: Forbes


Sign up for our Newsletter


Related:

  • Google security report finds phishing to be biggest threat

    November 14, 2017

    In an effort to better understand how users accounts get ‘hijacked,’ Google collaborated with the University of California at Berkeley to investigate how the black markets responsible for obtaining and selling user credentials operate. The study took place from March 2016 to March 2017 and the research focused primarily on tracking several large black markets trading ...

  • Google offers hackers $1,000 bounty to hack and fix Play Store apps

    October 20, 2017

    Google is offering security researchers a $1,000 (£760) bounty if they can successfully hack apps on its Play Store and help fix them. Bug bounty programmes are a popular way for companies to reward hackers who find vulnerabilities in their software and disclose them to developers so they can be fixed rather than exploited. The focus on ...

  • 8 More Chrome Extensions Hijacked to Target 4.8 Million Users

    August 16, 2017

    Google’s Chrome web browser Extensions are under attack with a series of developers being hacked within last one month. Almost two weeks ago, we reported how unknown attackers managed to compromise the Chrome Web Store account of a developer team and hijacked Copyfish extension, and then modified it to distribute spam correspondence to users. Just two days after ...

  • Chrome Flaw Allows Sites to Secretly Record Audio/Video Without Indication

    May 30, 2017

    What if your laptop is listening to everything that is being said during your phone calls or other people near your laptop and even recording video of your surrounding without your knowledge? Sounds really scary! Isn’t it? But this scenario is not only possible but is hell easy to accomplish. A UX design flaw in the Google’s ...

  • Taiwan government to block Google’s public DNS in favor of HiNet’s

    May 11, 2017

    The Taiwanese government intends to block Google’s public DNS service, citing cybersecurity concerns. The question is whether those concerns are the government’s or its citizens’, with the government pushing its own DNS service – a setup that is typically used to spy on people’s internet communications. The announcement comes, somewhat unusually, in the form of a PDF ...

  • Don’t click that Google Docs link! Gmail hijack mail spreads like wildfire

    May 3, 2017

    If you get an email today sharing a Google Docs file with you, don’t click it – you may accidentally hand over your Gmail inbox and your contacts to a mystery attacker. The phishing campaign really kicked off in a big way on Wednesday morning, US West Coast time. The malicious email contains what appears to ...