Department of Justice appeals Google search monopoly ruling
Briefly

Department of Justice appeals Google search monopoly ruling
"Just a few weeks ago, Google itself filed a notice to appeal and requested a pause on the remedies ordered by DC District Court Judge Amit Mehta last year. Those remedies included requiring Google to share search data with its rivals and barring Google from making exclusive distribution deals for its search or AI products that could hinder distribution for competitors."
"On Tuesday, the Department of Justice and the plaintiffs in the antitrust case against Google filed a cross-appeal, as the DOJ Antitrust Division announced in a post on X: "Today, the DOJ Antitrust Division filed notice that it will cross-appeal from the remedies decisions in its case against Google's unlawful monopolization of internet search and search advertising." The DOJ's cross-appeal suggests that neither party is fully satisfied with Judge Mehta's ruling in the case, or at least the remedies ordered in September."
The Department of Justice and private plaintiffs filed a cross-appeal targeting the remedies imposed for Google's unlawful monopolization of internet search and search advertising. Google previously filed its own notice to appeal and requested a pause on the remedies ordered by DC District Court Judge Amit Mehta. The remedies ordered would require Google to share search data with rivals and prohibit exclusive distribution deals for search or AI products that could impede competitors. The court did not require Google to sell its Chrome browser and did not bar payments for preloading or premium placement of its products.
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