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Google will have to give up search data to competitors but can keep Chrome and Android, a federal judge ruled in the landmark ...
In a sign of the times (and where things are going), visiting google.com/ai now opens Google Search AI Mode. Previously, ...
Judge Amit P. Mehta said the company must hand over some of its search data to rivals, but did not force other big changes ...
The ruling stems from a 2020 lawsuit filed by the DOJ, which argued Google was maintaining an illegal online search monopoly.
A report that shed more details on Apple Inc.’s (AAPL) improved Siri launch, equipped with new artificial intelligence (AI) ...
A federal judge’s remedy stops short of making meaningful changes to how we use our phones, computers and the web.
Google doesn't have to sell its wildly popular Chrome web browser, but it can't engage in exclusive search deals, US District ...
Many of Google’s AI rivals will have been disappointed to see the tech giant escape largely unscathed from its first major ...
Google has shaped the Internet as we know it, and unleashing its index could change everything.
Judge Amit Mehta found Google guilty of illegally monopolizing search, and then allowed the company to keep doing it.