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The complex and consequential antitrust trial against Google and its search engine practices recently heard its closing arguments, and the tech giant is already planning to appeal. In a post made ...
The company plans to appeal the final ruling in the case. Antitrust enforcers have proposed far-reaching measures designed to quickly open the search market and give new competitors a leg up.
Google wants to appeal the federal court's ruling on its search antitrust case, especially as Chrome is on the line.
It’s the lofty valuation of corporations naively assumed to possess monopoly powers that implies feverish competition.
Google last week lost a case against the US, which accused the company of violating antitrust law “by monopolizing open-web digital advertising markets.” Google said it would appeal the ruling.
Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) (GOOGL) announced its intention to appeal a federal judge's ruling in an ongoing antitrust case focused on its dominance in online search and digital advertising.
However, the company plans to appeal the verdicts, so the antitrust cases could play out in court for years.
Google's antitrust violations include paying Apple $20 billion to be its default search engine. Proposed remedies include splitting Chrome and Android, which Google plans to appeal.
Google said it will appeal an antitrust decision aimed at making competition in the online search market fair.
The tech giant confirmed plans to appeal the decision that a federal court made, accusing it of monopolistic practices with its search engine.
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