Last Updated on September 13, 2025
   
Last Updated on September 13, 2025

Google must share data with rivals, dodges Chrome breakup, keeps Apple deal in landmark antitrust case

PTOI
2025-09-03
News

In a rare win for Google in the monopoly case, a US judge ruled on Tuesday that the big tech wont have to sell its Chrome browser but ordered Google to share data with rivals to open up competition in online search.

Rejecting the governments demand that Google sell its Chrome web browser as part of a major antitrust case, the judge ordered that to resolve Google’s monopoly in search, the company must make available to qualified competitors search index data and user interaction information that rivals can use to improve their services.

As per news agency AFP, the company must also offer search result services to competitors for up to five years.

The ruling also specifically addresses the emerging threat from generative artificial intelligence chatbots like ChatGPT, extending restrictions to prevent Google from using exclusive deals to dominate the AI space as it did with traditional search.

Judge Amit Mehta of the US District Court for the District of Columbia also put restrictions on payments that Google uses to ensure its search engine gets prime placement in web browsers and on smartphones, The New York Times reported.

But he stopped short of banning those payments entirely and did not grant the government’s request that Google be forced to sell Chrome.

Whats the antitrust case? The landmark ruling came after Judge Amit Mehta found in August 2024 that Google illegally maintained monopolies in online search through exclusive distribution agreements worth billions of dollars annually.

The case focused on Googles expensive distribution agreements with Apple, Samsung, and other smartphone manufacturers that established Google as the default search engine on iPhones and other devices.

The ruling on Tuesday results from a five-year legal battle between one of the worlds most profitable companies and the US, where antitrust regulators and lawmakers have long questioned Big Techs market domination.

The impact Tuesdays ruling came as a relief for Apple and other device and Web browser makers. US District Judge Amit Mehta said they can continue to receive advertising revenue-sharing payments from Google for searches on their devices.

Google pays Apple $20 billion annually, Morgan Stanley analysts said last year.

It also made it easier for device makers and others who set Google search as a default to load apps created by Googles rivals, by barring Google from entering exclusive contracts.

Meanwhile, sharing data with competitors is expected to strengthen rivals to Googles advertising business, but not having to sell off Chrome or Android removed a major concern for investors who view them as key pieces to Googles overall business.

Google concerned about user privacy

After the judge required data sharing in the case over search, Reuters quoted Google as saying it has concerns about how these requirements will impact our users and their privacy, and we’re reviewing the decision closely.


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