If businesses succeed in meeting and leading the needs of consumers, it's increasingly true that their rewards include ...
Maria Curi, tech policy reporter at Axios, joins Marketplace’s Meghan McCarty Carino for "Tech Bytes: Week in Review." ...
The Justice Department recommendation is one of the final moves of Biden’s aggressive antitrust enforcers before Trump takes ...
The Department of Justice (DOJ) is asking a federal judge to order Google to sell off its Chrome browser after the court ...
Alphabet's Google must sell its Chrome browser, share data and search results with rivals and take other measures - including ...
Bloomberg reported the U.S. Justice Department aims to force Google to sell Chrome, which could fetch as much as $20 billion.
Until Thursday, shares of Google-parent Alphabet had largely escaped regulatory worry. A new government filing has changed ...
The Justice Department is looking to break up one of America’s most powerful companies following a court ruling in September ...
In a list of proposals, the U.S. government wants Google to sell off its stakes in AI companies that compete in search, as well as bar the tech giant from new deals and partnerships in the space.
One analyst called this proposed crackdown "draconian." Google's top lawyer said the DOJ's remedies would "break" the company's search engine.
DuckDuckGo has accused Google of trying to dodge European Union rules requiring data sharing. Google said it will not compromise user trust by giving competitors sensitive data. (Reporting by Jody ...
Alphabet isn’t backing down from what it calls the DOJ’s “extreme" proposal. Kent Walker, Google’s global affairs chief, argued that splitting off Chrome and Android could hurt user security, privacy, ...