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    Home » Blog » Google Defends Its $20 Billion Payoff to Apple in Antitrust Suit Closing Arguments

    Google Defends Its $20 Billion Payoff to Apple in Antitrust Suit Closing Arguments

    May 4, 2024Updated:May 4, 2024 Politics No Comments
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    In Washington, Google is preparing to take its last stand against the DOJ’s efforts to break the technology giant’s dying hand on online research, which is coming to an end in 25 times.

    The Financial Times reports that the federal prosecutor in Washington began hearing closing arguments on Thursday in the 10- year test, where the DOJ accused Alphabet, Google’s parent company, of suppressing search rivals by paying tens of billions every for anti- dynamic agreements with cellular carriers, browser developers, and device manufacturers.

    Google’s attorney, John Schmidtlein, pushed up on claims that the firm had hindered adversaries ‘ efforts to gain a foothold in online research, arguing that people had plenty of options. Schmidtlein told the court,” Google winning partnerships because it has a better solution is not harming the dynamic process, even if it gives it level to increase its product.”

    But, Kenneth Dintzer, a solicitor for the state, countered that Google’s “anti- competitive perform harms competition and is self- perpetuating”. He argued that defaults “are a powerful way to drive searches,” as opposed to” Google would n’t pay billions of dollars for them.”

    Unsealed court records revealed that Alphabet paid Apple$ 20 billion to use as the iPhone’s and other device’s default search engine in 2022 alone. The high stakes involved in securing default search positions are highlighted by this revelation.

    The case has evolved significantly over the past ten years, according to Judge Amit Mehta, who presided over the case. He also acknowledged that only two” substantial competitors” had entered the search market in the past ten years, which raised potential barriers to entry, despite the DOJ’s claim that the quality of search had declined as a result of the lack of competition.

    The trial also touched on Google’s alleged monopolization of advertising and subsequent abuse of its dominance by raising prices and “manipulating” auctions. Google asserted that search competition had “never been more varied or significant” and that demand was driven by the caliber of its goods.

    This antitrust trial is the most well-known since the DOJ’s investigation into Microsoft in the 1990s, and it provides a significant defense for the Biden administration’s tougher stance on reducing the influence of Big Tech. The DOJ recently filed a lawsuit against Apple, while the Federal Trade Commission has pending litigation against Meta and Amazon.

    Read more at&nbsp, the Financial Times here.

    For Breitbart News, Lucas Nolan reports on issues involving free speech and online censorship.

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