Chrome on the chopping block as Google's search antitrust trial moves forward
Briefly

The remedy phase of Google's search antitrust trial is set to begin, following a ruling that deemed Google guilty of maintaining a search monopoly. The U.S. Justice Department aims to implement significant changes, including divesting Chrome and unbundling Android. Meanwhile, Google is trying to argue that the government's demands are excessive. This trial, described as potentially the most important antitrust case since the 1990s Microsoft trial, seeks to determine the fate of Google amidst a backdrop of ongoing legal troubles related to antitrust violations.
The DOJ sees this as the most consequential antitrust case in the US since the Microsoft trial of the 1990s.
Google has been found guilty of willfully acquiring and maintaining monopoly power, violating the Sherman Antitrust Act.
Read at Ars Technica
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