BOOM: Judge Rules Google Is a Monopolist
Judge Amit Mehta ruled that Google violated the Sherman Antitrust
Act by excluding rivals from the general search engine market in
order to maintain its monopoly. What happens now?
Matt Stoller
Aug 06, 2024
Today is a big day for American business.
"After having carefully considered and weighed the witness testimony
and evidence,” wrote Judge Amit Mehta in his decision of the case
United States of America vs Google LLC, “the court reaches the
following conclusion: Google is a monopolist, and it has acted as
one to maintain its monopoly. It has violated Section 2 of the
Sherman Act."
Fifteen years after it was first investigated, search giant Google
is finally going to be held accountable for unfairly thwarting
competition. In this piece, I’m going to discuss the complaint
against Google, why it lost, the next steps, and what this case
means for American business going forward.
Make no mistake, this decision is huge for Google, the web, and the
revival of monopolization law against giants across the economy.
It’s also a big deal for the BIG community. We’ve been writing about
this case, covering antitrust law, filing comments, contacting
policymakers and pushing for aggressive enforcement for almost five
years. Subscribers to BIG helped finance the special site Big Tech
on Trial, where we hired a reporter to cover the case and helped
ensure that the judge didn’t keep key evidence behind closed doors.
So this victory is not just for the public, it is in a sense by the
public.
[...]
continua qui:
https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/boom-judge-rules-google-is-a-monopolist