In a landmark antitrust case, the government asked a judge to force the company to sell its popular Chrome browser.
Google's planned merger of ChromeOS and Android makes the DOJ's antitrust arguments even stronger. Here's why.
The Justice Department’s move to break up Alphabet Inc.’s Google marks an attempt to disrupt the tech industry in a way that ...
The DOJ’s proposals clued in the public to what the government really wants out of Google. Though the complaint was filed in ...
The Department of Justice’s demand that the tech behemoth sell its Chrome search engine or Android mobile operating system ...
Google may complain the DOJ's remedies are “anti-innovation.” But forward-looking pro-public tech innovation requires more ...
Breaking up Standard Oil in 1911 created firms too small to be as efficient as their predecessor was, which coincided with an ...
The Justice Department is demanding that Google sell off its Chrome browser. Here's how the potential divestiture could have ...
Efforts by U.S. antitrust regulators to break up Alphabet by forcing a sale of its Google Chrome browser and other proposals ...
U.S. regulators want a federal judge to break up Google to prevent the company from continuing to squash competition through ...
Michelle Rowland said TikTok, Facebook, Snapchat, Reddit, X and Instagram were among the platforms that would face fines of up to 50 million Australian dollars (US$33 million) for systemic ...
Do Canada's sex work laws violate its constitution? A case argued before the country's Supreme Court this month brings the question to the forefront of Canadian law. The case is Kloubakov v.