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Persons: Jim Cramer, We'll, Kent Walker, Walker, we've, Justice Department —, Baird, haven't, Amit Mehta, Mehta, Jim Cramer's, Jim Organizations: CNBC, ., Nvidia, Google, Department of Justice, DOJ, Bloomberg, Justice Department, ISI, Ross Stores, Intuit, Jim Cramer's Charitable Locations: Eaton, Dover
On Wednesday, DOJ officials in the antitrust division filed their proposal for remedies in the case. The DOJ wants Judge Mehta to force Google to sell its Chrome browser. Officials from the Department of Justice, in a Wednesday filing, urged District Judge Amit Mehta to force Google to sell its Chrome browser. AdvertisementMehta will consider the DOJ's proposal before he makes a final ruling regarding remedies in this case. "But if Google is able to control the company that buys Chrome, the impact of selling the business would be minimal.
Persons: Amit Mehta, Judge Mehta, Mehta, Lee, Anne Mulholland, Eric Chaffee, it's, Peter Cohan, Neil Chilson, Chilson, Joe Biden's, Donald Trump, Trump, Biden, Cohan, Chafee Organizations: Google, DOJ, Department of Justice, Apple, Business, Bloomberg, Case Western Reserve University, Babson College, FTC, Chrome, Case
Google has promised to appeal; the company didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on Wednesday’s filing. “Google is a monopolist, and it has acted as one to maintain its monopoly,” Mehta wrote in his opinion. The Microsoft case has been credited with paving the way for Mozilla’s Firefox and Google’s Chrome browsers, which ultimately allowed Google to promote its search engine to billions of internet users. The Microsoft parallels in the Google case are clear, Mehta wrote in his August opinion. Even as Google fights the Justice Department on remedies in the search case, the company is embroiled in another antitrust battle just across the Potomac River in Alexandria, Virginia.
Persons: didn’t, Amit Mehta, Mehta, Satya Nadella, Bing, OpenAI, Trump, Joe Biden, – Mehta, Sherman, ” Mehta, , Organizations: CNN, Google, Justice Department, Apple, Samsung, DOJ, Microsoft, Verizon, Court, District, Columbia, Chrome, Windows, Netscape, Department Locations: California, Alexandria , Virginia
AdvertisementA federal judge ruled in August that Google violated antitrust law to keep a monopoly on search. DOJ officials reportedly plan to ask a judge to force Google to sell Chrome. Officials from the DOJ are reportedly planning to ask a judge to force Google to sell its Chrome browser. Business Insider previously reported Google's total search revenue was $279.8 billion in 2022. Representatives for the Department of Justice did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
Persons: Amit Mehta, Lee, Anne Mulholland, Peter Cohan Organizations: Google, Justice, DOJ, Chrome, Bloomberg, Prosecutors, Department of Justice, Business, Google Services, Babson College
Caleb Berry, masked, at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. It was wrong.”Mehta sentenced Berry to three years probation, the sentence requested by federal prosecutors due to his extensive cooperation. He’s also promised to pardon an undefined number of Jan. 6 rioters, even as new arrests continue to roll in. "Jeremy Michael Miller, the FBI said, fought with police officers on the west side of the Capitol on Jan. 6. Screenshot of body worn camera footage showing Reynold Voisine (yellow square) throwing a rod at police officers.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Caleb Berry, Berry, Kelly Meggs —, , he'll, Judge Amit Mehta, Stewart Rhodes, he'd, Rhodes, Mehta, ” Mehta, , ” Berry, “ We’ve, he’s, Jack Smith “, He’s, Jeffrey Newcomb, Robert Bixby, FBI Robert Bixby, Bixby, Zachary Pearlman, Pearlman, Jeremy Michael Miller, Miller, Roger Voisine, Reynold Voisine —, sleuths, Reynold Voisine, FBI Roger Viosine, motherf, Michael Fanone Organizations: WASHINGTON, Republican, Trump, Capitol, Attorney's, District of Columbia, District of Columbia . U.S, White, Justice Department, FBI, Metropolitan Police Department Locations: Washington, District of Columbia ., Virginia, United States, California, Washignton
Google plans to appeal a federal judge's antitrust ruling, CEO Sundar Pichai said. AdvertisementGoogle is preparing for a yearslong fight to appeal a federal judge's antitrust ruling against the company. Google CEO Sundar Pichai appeared on Bloomberg's "The David Rubenstein Show," where he spoke publicly about Google's search engine antitrust case for the first time since Department of Justice prosecutors submitted their proposed remedies. AdvertisementUltimately, Mehta will decide which orders Google must follow in order to restore competition to the search market, but the company will appeal. The Google antitrust case is one of the biggest of the last 30 years and has been closely watched by other Big Tech giants.
Persons: Sundar Pichai, , David Rubenstein, Pichai, Amit Mehta's, Mehta Organizations: DOJ, Google, Big Tech, Service, Justice, Prosecutors
Why the U.S. government is investigating Google
  + stars: | 2024-10-10 | by ( Carlos Waters | In Carloswaters | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +3 min
Google, the online search and digital ad goliath, is the first U.S. tech giant to land in federal court fighting antitrust concerns in decades. Google controls an estimated 88% of the market for general search online, according to the August opinion from Judge Mehta. And late in 2023, a jury delivered a guilty verdict against Google in a trial about business practices related to the Google Play app store. In September 2024, Epic filed an additional antitrust lawsuit against Google and Samsung, alleging that the company continued to use its monopoly power to unfairly harm competition. Watch the video above to see why the U.S. government is investigating Google.
Persons: Amit Mehta, Judge Mehta, Bing, Lee Hepner, Nikolas Guggenberger, Gene Munster Organizations: Google, U.S, District of Columbia, Justice Department, American Economic Liberties, Epic Games, Samsung, University of, Deepwater Asset Management, CNBC Locations: U.S
AdvertisementFor years, the US Justice Department's lawsuit against Google's Search business has been largely ignored by Wall Street and even many of Google's employees. They also include sharing some of Google's search data with rivals. The DOJ is also considering cracking open Google's search index and forcing it to share data, including the nitty-gritty of how Google ranks website quality. The DOJ said this could include the models used for Google's AI Search features. AdvertisementThe DOJ has said it's also weighing a proposal that websites can opt out of Google's AI training and from appearing in AI search results altogether.
Persons: , Department's, Bernstein, Amit Mehta, Dan Morgan, monetization, Max, Morgan, Dan Ives, Liz Reid, Marissa Mayer, it's, It's Organizations: US Justice Department, Google, Analysts, Service, Google's, Wall, DOJ, Apple, European Union, Chrome, Wedbush, Tech, Media, Finance, Sunshine Locations: European, Europe
CNBC's Jim Cramer on Wednesday criticized the Department of Justice's potential remedies in the Google search-monopoly case, arguing that, if they were implemented, the California tech giant would be "a shell of its former self." In early August, Judge Amit Mehta ruled that Google used illegal practices to maintain a monopoly in the internet search market. "This is devastating," Cramer said Wednesday on "Squawk on the Street," reacting to the DOJ filing. The stock has lagged the S & P 500 considerably since the monopoly ruling was handed down Aug. 5. Including Wednesday's intraday move, shares are down more than 3.5% compared with a nearly 8% gain for the S & P 500.
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Amit Mehta, Cramer, Lee, Anne Mulholland, It's Organizations: of, Google, U.S ., Trust, CNBC, Justice Department, Wall, Greyhound, Club Locations: California, U.S
Prosecutors proposed remedies after Google antitrust violation ruling by a federal judge. Judge Amit Mehta previously ruled Google violated antitrust laws by securing default search deals. AdvertisementProsecutors said they're considering a requirement that Google share the data that powers a big chunk of its business — the inputs and models for Google search and search results — through an application programming interface. Another proposal would prevent the company from using its other products, such as Chrome and Android, to promote Google search over competitors. Google previously said that the company plans to appeal the ruling, which could delay the judge from imposing any remedies filed by the prosecution.
Persons: Amit Mehta, , Prosecutors, doled, Evelyn Mitchell, Wolf, Mehta, Dan Ives Organizations: Service, Google, Big Tech, Apple, Prosecutors, Companies, Microsoft, Wedbush Securities, Department of Justice
US government considers a breakup of Google
  + stars: | 2024-10-09 | by ( Clare Duffy | Brian Fung | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +3 min
The US Department of Justice in a court filing Tuesday night said it may recommend dismantling Google’s core businesses, separating Google’s search business from Android, Chrome and the Google Play app store. “That would prevent Google from using products such as Chrome, Play, and Android to advantage Google search and Google search-related products and features — including emerging search access points and features, such as artificial intelligence — over rivals or new entrants,” the government said in its court filing. The case had been described as the biggest tech antitrust case since the US government’s antitrust showdown with Microsoft at the turn of the millennium. Whatever ultimately happens to Google could set the stage for potential remedies in other, ongoing antitrust cases against tech giants. Google faces a separate case brought by DOJ attorneys, along with 17 states, who allege that its advertising business is anticompetitive.
Persons: , Amit Mehta, ” Kent Walker Organizations: CNN, Baby, Google, US Department of Justice, Android, Apple, Microsoft, DOJ, Meta, Ticketmaster
For Google, the focus turns to its ad tools, which are part of the company’s $200 billion digital ad business. In the first antitrust case, the court found that Google violated Section 2 of the Sherman Act, which outlaws monopolies. The company’s M&A strategy “set the stage for Google’s later exclusionary conduct across the ad tech industry,” the Justice Department alleges. Google has long fought back against claims that it dominates online ads, pointing to the market share of competitors including Meta. It will argue that buyers and sellers have many options especially as the online ad market has evolved.
Persons: Biden, Donald Trump, Meta, Sherman, Goldman, Bernstein, Amit Mehta, ” Mehta, Google’s, Neal Mohan, Mohan, it’s, AdMeld, Jerry Dischler, It’s, Sissie Hsiao, Scott Sheffer, Prabhakar Raghavan, Simon Whitcombe Organizations: Department of Justice, Google, Microsoft, Big Tech, DOJ, Apple, Federal Trade Commission, Facebook, Amazon, Citibank, NYSE, New York Stock Exchange, YouTube, Google Network, U.S, District of Columbia, Department, DoubleClick, Meta, Stanford, Harvard, New York Times Locations: Alexandria , Virginia, California , Colorado , Connecticut , New Jersey , New York, Rhode Island and Tennessee, Google’s
The idea is that the US would require Google to make its Search index publicly available for anyone to use. AdvertisementBots and indexesA Search index is created by a bot crawling the web and collecting keywords and other information from sites. Related storiesGoogle's Search index is the biggest in the world. The Search index as part of the public commonsWouldn't this be taking something that belongs to Google, though? In the same way Bing powers DuckDuckGo, Google's open index could power other rival search engines that could offer different approaches to Google's search engine.
Persons: , It's, wouldn't, it's, Amit Mehta's, Bing, DuckDuckGo Organizations: Service, Justice Department, Business, Google, Rivals, Mobile Virtual Network, Verizon, DOJ
Google faces a reckoningShares in Alphabet, Google’s parent company, were down in premarket trading on Wednesday on news that the Justice Department is said to be considering breaking up the technology giant for maintaining an illegal search monopoly. That would be a devastating blow for the company, but it could also have huge ramifications for the broader tech sector, with Apple, Amazon and Meta all facing their own antitrust battles with the government. A recap: In a ruling last week, Judge Amit Mehta of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia agreed with the government and multiple states that Google’s dominance in search was constraining competition. Google said it would appeal. Mehta has asked both parties to submit suggested remedies by Sept. 4, with a hearing set to take place two days later.
Persons: Amit Mehta, Mehta Organizations: Google, Justice, Apple, U.S, District of Columbia
A federal judge held last week that Google has a monopoly on online search and has been illegally defending that monopoly for years. The verdict is important and correct, yet it leaves open an important question: What should the remedy be? The government’s case centered on payments, which in 2021 totaled more than $26 billion, that Google pays Apple and others to be the default search engine on their products. In doing so, Google kept Apple out of the search market and, the judge ruled, weakened its other competitors. But if the court merely decrees that Google now abandon those agreements, it won’t be enough to unlock a long-monopolized market.
Persons: Amit Mehta Organizations: Google, Biden, Apple
CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. The Dow plummeted over 1,000 points, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite fell 3% and 3.4%, respectively. Wharton finance professor Jeremy Siegel urged the Federal Reserve to make an emergency 75-basis-point cut in the federal funds rate following Friday's disappointing jobs data. Siegel believes the current fed funds rate "should be somewhere between 3.5% and 4%," citing the higher-than-expected unemployment rate and declining inflation as reasons for the cuts. "How much have we moved the fed funds rate?
Persons: Berkshire Hathaway, Amit Mehta, Wharton, Jeremy Siegel, Siegel, Austan Goolsbee, Goolsbee, CNBC's, Korea's Kospi, Richard Kaye Organizations: CNBC, Dow Jones Industrial, Dow, Nasdaq, Tech, Nvidia, Tesla, Berkshire, Google, Department of Justice, Federal Reserve, Chicago Federal, Nikkei, Honda, Renesas Electronics, CSI Locations: U.S, Asia, Pacific
The federal court ruling that Google had abused its monopoly in online search threatens to disrupt one of the most valuable businesses in modern history, and Big Tech more broadly. Expect Google to fight back, which could drag this out for some time. What happened: Judge Amit Mehta of U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia sided with the Justice Department and several states that had accused Google of illegally cementing its search dominance. In large part that was by paying billions each year to companies including Apple and Samsung to make Google the default search engine on their devices. Those agreements hurt competition, Mehta found, allowing Google to trample competitors.
Persons: Amit Mehta, Mehta Organizations: Google, Big Tech, U.S, District, Columbia, Justice Department, Apple, Samsung
CNBC Daily Open: Dow sheds 1,000 points
  + stars: | 2024-08-06 | by ( Abid Ali | Kevin Lim | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +3 min
CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Wall Street sinksThe Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 suffered their sharpest declines in nearly two years, as growing concerns about the U.S. economy rocked global stock markets. The Dow plummeted over 1,000 points, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite fell 3% and 3.4%, respectively. Wharton finance professor Jeremy Siegel urged the Federal Reserve to make an emergency 75-basis-point cut in the federal funds rate following Friday's disappointing jobs data. [PRO] Don't panicDespite a global stock market rout, several investors and strategists advised against panicking at this point.
Persons: Berkshire Hathaway, Amit Mehta, Wharton, Jeremy Siegel, Siegel, Austan Goolsbee, Goolsbee, CNBC's, cryptocurrencies, Bitcoin, bitcoin, Nexo, Antoni Trenchev, panicking Organizations: CNBC, Dow Jones Industrial, Dow, Nasdaq, Tech, Nvidia, Tesla, Berkshire, Google, Department of Justice, Federal Reserve, Chicago Federal, bitcoin Locations: U.S
A federal U.S. judge ruled Monday that Google has illegally held a monopoly in two market areas: search and text advertising. The landmark case from the government, filed in 2020, alleged that Google has kept its share of the general search market by creating strong barriers to entry and a feedback loop that sustained its dominance. General search services, according to the court, applies to Google’s core search engine, where it traditionally competed with Yahoo. General search text advertising refers to the text ads that run alongside search results. However, the ruling found that general search advertising is not a market so there can be no monopoly control.
Persons: Sherman, Amit Mehta, Sundar Pichai, Boris Streubel, General Merrick Garland, , ” Garland, Kent Walker, ” Walker Organizations: Google, U.S, District of Columbia, DFB The Department of Justice, Colorado and, Department, Yahoo Locations: U.S, Colorado, Colorado and Nebraska
"Google is a monopolist, and it has acted as one to maintain its monopoly," the judge wrote. It was accused of spending billions to be the default search engine on Apple devices and beyond. Go to newsletter preferences Thanks for signing up! AdvertisementGoogle violated antitrust law with its online search, a federal judge ruled Monday, striking a major blow against one of the titans of the tech industry. District Judge Amit Mehta said Google's billions in payments to keep its search engine as the default on web browsers violated US law.
Persons: , Judge Amit Mehta, Mehta Organizations: Google, Service, titans, Business
New York CNN —Google has violated US antitrust law with its search business, a federal judge ruled Monday, handing the tech giant a staggering court defeat with the potential to reshape how millions of Americans get information online and to upend decades of dominance. The decision by the US District Court for the District of Columbia is a stunning rebuke of Google’s oldest and most important business. The company has spent tens of billions of dollars on exclusive contracts to secure a dominant position as the world’s default search provider on smartphones and web browsers. Now, said US District Judge Amit Mehta, that powerful position has led to anticompetitive behavior that must be stopped. “It has violated Section 2 of the Sherman Act.”This is a developing story and will be updated.
Persons: Microsoft’s Bing, Trump, Amit Mehta, , ” Mehta, Sherman Organizations: New, New York CNN, Google, US, Court, District of Columbia Locations: New York
CNN —Whenever you type a search into Apple’s Safari browser — say, on an iPhone — chances are it’s Google that returns the results. You can tell Safari to pick another search engine, but in practice most people tend to stick with Google by default. You might know that Google pays Apple enormous sums of money every year for that prime placement. Those eye-popping figures, newly unsealed this week, come from a blockbuster antitrust lawsuit against Google that’s just entered its closing stages. Nothing prevented Apple from choosing a different default search partner, Google contends.
Persons: , Google that’s, Trump, Amit Mehta, Mehta, ” Mehta, John Schmidtlein, Google’s, Sherman, , ” Schmidtlein Organizations: CNN, Google, Apple, Justice Department, DOJ, Microsoft
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Google's landmark antitrust trial is wrapping up this week in DC with closing arguments, capping off a yearslong saga. AdvertisementIn the end, Judge Mehta could clear Google or find it liable, which could result in changes to its search engine contracts. Mehta could even bar Google from making future deals around its search engine. In his testimony, Google SVP Prabhakar Raghavan noted the search giant is referred to as "Grandpa Google" in some circles and cited execs' fears that its influence might be dwindling.
Persons: , Amit Mehta, Satya Nadella, Sundar Pichai, Google's, Kent Walker, Judge Mehta, Mehta, Prabhakar Raghavan, Google Organizations: Service, Apple, Business, US, Microsoft, Justice, Google, The New York Times, DOJ, FTC, Amazon, Meta, Big Tech, AP
CNN —Peter Navarro, a former trade adviser to President Donald Trump who was convicted of contempt of Congress, has been ordered to report to prison after a judge denied Navarro’s effort to stay out of prison while he appeals the conviction. Circuit, Defendant shall report to the designated Bureau of Prisons facility on the date ordered by the BOP.”CNN has reached out to Navarro’s lawyer for comment. The decision from Mehta stands in stark contrast to how the conviction of Steve Bannon was handled. It’s unclear from Mehta’s order what date exactly Navarro will be required to report to prison. Shortly after his sentencing, Navarro notified the court that he was appealing the sentence.
Persons: Peter Navarro, Donald Trump, Navarro, Amit Mehta, ” Mehta, Mehta, Steve Bannon, Bannon, Trump Organizations: CNN, Capitol, D.C, of Prisons, ” CNN, DC, Appeals Locations: Washington ,
A federal judge on Thursday denied Trump White House official Peter Navarro's bid to remain out of prison while he appeals his contempt of Congress conviction for refusing to cooperate with an investigation into the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. The former White House trade adviser under President Donald Trump had asked to be free while he fights that conviction and sentence in higher courts. The judge said Navarro hasn't shown that any of the issues he will raise on appeal are "substantial" questions of law. Former White House adviser Steve Bannon previously received a four-month sentence but is free pending appeal. The House committee spent 18 months investigating the insurrection, interviewing over 1,000 witnesses, holding 10 hearings and obtaining more than 1 million pages of documents.
Persons: Peter Navarro, Donald Trump, Peter Navarro's, Navarro, Judge Amit Mehta, Navarro hasn't, Mehta, Barack Obama, Navarro didn't, Trump, Steve Bannon, Jack Smith, Joe Biden Organizations: U.S, Trump White House, U.S . Capitol, White, Bureau of Prisons, Trump, Capitol, Republican Locations: Washington
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