Federal Court Rules That Google Illegally Maintained a Monopoly
Google is "the best," the court says. But being on top is dangerous.

A decision is here in the massive, multi-government case against Google. In an August 5 ruling, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia held that Google violated federal antitrust law.
The case stems from lawsuits filed by both the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and several U.S. states. In the suits—now consolidated—they argued that Google held a monopoly on internet searches and search advertising and had engaged in "exclusionary conduct" to maintain this monopoly, in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890.
Far from showing Google to be some sort of mustache-twirling corporate villain, however, the ruling showcases how vague U.S. antitrust law is, how subjective interpretations of it can be, and how weirdly federal courts tend to view market dynamics.
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Google Is the Default
In a decision penned by U.S. District Judge Amit P. Mehta, the court acknowledges that Google earned its top spot in the search engine game by hiring highly skilled people, innovating constantly, and making "shrewd business decisions," thereby becoming "the industry's highest quality search engine." Nothing wrong with that.
But Google also struck deals with browser developers, mobile phone companies, and wireless carriers to be the default search engine on their browsers or devices.
These deals do not seem, to me, like they should be illegal. No one is forcing Apple, Mozilla, etc., to strike said deals with Google. And no one is forcing users of their products to use Google for web searching just because it's pre-set as the default. The default may be "extremely valuable real estate," as the court puts it, but if consumers were unhappy with Google, they could set another default.
The reason many don't switch from the default surely turns on Google being, in the court's own words, "the industry's highest quality search engine." Inertia and laziness probably play a role, too, of course. But if Google was terrible, many people would overcome inertia or laziness in order to switch.
"Today's decision pretends that defaults aren't easy for users to change, which they are," said Jessica Melugin, director of the Competitive Enterprise Institute's Center for Technology and Innovation. "Google was believed by Apple to provide the best value, but if customers disagree, it takes about 30 seconds for them to switch to their preferred search tool."
Will a finding that such deals are illegal actually help consumers? Probably not.
"The default contract was a competitive, private process that likely reduced costs for phone purchasers," said Melguin. "That benefit is now in question."
'Google Is a Monopolist'
After more than two years of discovery, with "millions of pages" and "petabytes of data" exchanged, the case came to a trial in September 2023 and, after a lot of post-trial motions, closing arguments were held in March 2024. In the end, the court found Google's distribution agreements to be illegally anticompetitive.
"After having carefully considered and weighed the witness testimony and evidence, the court reaches the following conclusions: Google is a monopolist, and it has acted as one to maintain its monopoly," Mehta writes.
Specifically, the court found that Google had a monopoly on general search services and general search text ads. "Google's distribution agreements are exclusive and have anticompetitive effects," states the decision. "Google has not offered valid procompetitive justifications for those agreements." The court also concluded that Google "exercised its monopoly power by charging supracompetitive prices for general search text ads."
The ruling wasn't all bad news for Google. The court rejected the DOJ's argument that Google had a monopoly on search advertising, held that Google was not liable "for its actions involving its advertising platform, SA360," and decided against sanctioning Google for not saving employee chat messages.
Google Is 'the Best'
Still, the ruling showcases how weird antitrust law is. The court doesn't deny that Google has a great product, and it doesn't allege that Google engaged in any sort of deceptive or devious behavior to get people to use it. The issue is merely that Google willfully attempted to maintain its perch as the top search engine by striking deals to be the default search setting on browsers and phones or by setting it as the default on its own products.
Google says it won its contracts with other tech companies through competition—and "in a sense, Google is not wrong," the court admits. "It has long been the best search engine, particularly on mobile devices," and it has perpetually innovated.
"Google's partners value its quality, and they continue to select Google as the default because its search engine provides the best bet for monetizing queries," Mehta writes. Microsoft and DuckDuckGo have tried to bid for the default positions and "these firms have not succeeded in part due to their inferior quality."
The court also admits that Google won out here by having the foresight to concentrate on mobile devices when Microsoft did not.
But because "Google's monopoly in general search has been remarkably durable," it now "has no true competitor," the court determined. Therefore any agreements it makes to maintain its dominance are illegal, basically.
This is nuts. The court essentially says that you can work hard, innovate, be shrewd, spend money, and do all sorts of legal things to gain massive market share—but, once you do, you better sit back and let others usurp your position or else you're an illegal monopolist.
'Courts Are Not Very Good at Understanding How Markets Work'
"The court's order, which relies heavily on contested theories from the field of behavioral economics about the supposed power of defaults, fails to demonstrate how the contractual agreements at-issue harm consumers or competition," said International Center for Law and Economics President Geoffrey A. Manne via email. "Moreover, the court overlooks the broader competitive landscape in search and the vigorous competition in which Google has been engaged to become the default search engine."
"The fact that Google search has an 80% market share even on Windows devices, where Edge is the default browser and Bing is the default search engine, demonstrates that consumers go out of their way to use Google because they believe it is the best option," Manne pointed out. "A default placement is worth very little if your product isn't any good. By the same token, Google hasn't been ousted as the default anywhere, because it has a superior product. The opinion offers no evidence to suggest that Bing would have become a viable competitor under any other set of facts."
Or, as Dan Greenberg, general counsel at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, put it: "The reason people use Google isn't because of monopoly power; it's because the company offers something people like. Sometimes courts are not very good at understanding how markets work."
One long-standing bug of antitrust decisions around tech is that courts look at the current technological landscape and are unable to imagine how things might change. This happened previously with Microsoft, in a 1990s case that echoes the current case against Google. The case turned on the charge that Microsoft had illegally set its own browser, Internet Explorer, as the default on Microsoft's Windows operating systems. I looked at the Microsoft case and its lessons in this 2021 piece about the bipartisan antitrust crusade against big tech:
Attorney General Janet Reno claimed Microsoft had given itself "a chokehold on the browser software needed to access the Internet"—despite the fact that computer manufacturers could also give users other browser software and Windows users could install them. Since Explorer was included as the default option (and could never be fully deleted) and Windows was the most widely used operating system at the time, the feds claimed that consumers were trapped or tricked into using Microsoft's portal to the web. The DOJ sought to force Microsoft to either unbundle the Internet Explorer browser or to include the browser of its competitor, Netscape, in its operating system.
The DOJ's case had rested on the assumption that Microsoft had given itself an unfair advantage over competitors that made it the permanent king of the tech industry. This argument assumed that the market was static and that change could come only from the heavy hand of the government. Yet as with IBM, Microsoft lost market power because a host of nimble upstart competitors found ways to meet consumer needs in unexpected ways.
The government went after Microsoft just as web-based applications won out over operating system–based applications and mobile operating systems won out over desktop computing.
The same thing may be happening now with Google, suggests Jennifer Huddleston, a senior fellow in technology policy at the Cato Institute.
"The court's decision has a rather static view of the market for search at a time when the way we interact with technology is changing what it means for search (and if general search engines will even be relevant in a few years)," Huddleston posted on X. "For example, the court did not address the ways in which generative AI products including Google's own Gemini or ChatGPT might alter the overall market for search services."
Huddleston also points out how the ruling's focus is not on consumer well-being or utility. "Notably, the decision focused not on the end user consumer or their preferences for various search services but on the underlying agreements between various businesses. It is unclear what the potential remedies might be or how they will impact the consumer experience," she said.
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• Here's a good thread on how far AI image-generation has come in the past few years.
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The court on Friday reversed the order of dismissal and sent the case back for further proceedings. The anti-abortion group Life Defense Fund had appealed Judge John Pekas' ruling that dismissed its lawsuit seeking to invalidate the measure. The group alleged myriad wrongdoing related to petition circulators.
• A federal court ruled this week that "the National Institutes of Health (NIH) violated the First Amendment rights of animal rights activists whose social media comments were deleted by the agency," reports Reason's Emma Camp.
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But being on top is dangerous.
Awesome from the Sex and Tech reporter. Well done. Well played. 9.5 from the East German judge.
We need MORE laws, such ass, "All players will be allocated their duly owed turn on the top, 50% of the time or more!"
(Judges and other Government Almighty employees will be exempt ass usual, being owed 1200% or more of the turns at the top!)
Speaking "my turn on top" of Spermy Daniels...
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Used to be ...
Now we have to add a fourth one:
What about buying potential new competitors and then shutting them down.
Or getting started with government (CIA) money and then lobbying for regulations that inhibit competitors from starting up.
Google had an excellent product twenty years ago, but they have become shitty, prioritizing advertisers with the actual results on the second or third page, and dumping great features like google image search.
#1 is a sure way to go out of business, as has been shown many times, and a little common sense and a little actual arithmetic on a piece of paper shows it is nonsense, same as predatory pricing. It costs more to drive the competitor out of business than can be recovered by raising prices afterwards, and it does not prevent new competitors who need the same treatment. Of course, they can always bribe government to help them keep out competitors, such as becoming a regulated industry, raising barriers to entry with expensive regulations, or securing copyrights and patents.
#2 brings government directly into the picture. Expecting government to step into the picture a second time, to solve the problem it created the first time, is ludicrous.
Government is always the problem.
They actively engage in election interfearence
Here's a good thread on how far AI image-generation has come in the past few years.
African Nazis were proof of that. NEVER FORGET!
Rommel was an African Nazi – at least for a while….
then he left for Normandy. Hmm, I wonder if thats the real life story behind Out Of Africa. (never watched that movie)
A federal court ruled this week that "the National Institutes of Health (NIH) violated the First Amendment rights of animal rights activists whose social media comments were deleted by the agency," reports Reason's Emma Camp.
You oughta see what they did for COVID dissent.
What monopoly? If Bing were any good, people would use that instead. If Microsoft would get out of their own way and stop programming ChatGPT to be woke, people would use ChatGPT for search over Google.
ever do a political search on bing or google? I have been getting 50+ progressive or left sources for hits out of the first 55 results… and 25 / 25 proggy hits first for any
allnewsweek, wapo, nytimes
times… all those kinds of ‘reliable’ sources
actually maybe more concentrated ‘truthy’ sources than 50/55
the chat engines at least have the decency [algorithmic cowardice] to say - I cant reply to that topic
" . . . but if consumers were unhappy with Google, they could set another default."
True enough. I use Google (as default) for searches where there is no political dimension possible, just like I use Wikipedia.
You know, population of a state, when a TV show was on air, what is the rate of aimed fire for a bolt action rifle at 300 yards, that sort of thing.
But if I need actual facts on something at all political, like how many slaves were brought to Jamestown in 1619 (zero), or what are the policy positions of Kamala Harris, I use another option.
what are the policy positions of Kamala Harris,
Just refer to her multitude of press conferences in the last 17 days. Oh, wait…….
"The court essentially says that you can work hard, innovate, be shrewd, spend money, and do all sorts of legal things to gain massive market share—but, once you do, you better sit back and let others usurp your position or else you're an illegal monopolist."
The courts didn't write our anti-trust laws, they just enforce them as written. Maybe you should direct your ire in the correct direction, towards Congress?
Though I'll grant that if the courts weren't running from economic liberties, (The dreaded "Lochnerism".) they might have stopped Congress.
Would be a fun troll for Google to roll out a patch to disable using the url bar to search for content and disable having a default page.
Can they sue Microsoft as well for popping up garbage news like MSN on windows desktop? Seems anti competitive. I keep blocking MSN and every windows update removes my block.
For example, the court did not address the ways in which generative AI products including Google's own Gemini or ChatGPT might alter the overall market for search services.
This is a retarded argument. It is not the courts job to consider the future ramifications of their rulings.
Their job is to judge the laws as is.
You give users too much credit. Nearly all of them use the default search engine because they have no idea how to change that setting.
There are solutions for that which do not require government meddling. How do you think any new product gains market share without calling on Uncle Sugar?
You either believe in markets or you don't.
a) mattwa is mostly correct
b) its not a zero sum scenario... google is gaming laziness, greed (bribery) and ignorance just as microsoft did with their OS years ago.
Why does any of that justify getting the government to "solve" the problem? Neither of you has come out and said that explicitly, but you have both claimed the market isn't handling it, which can only mean you think government should.
You are both wrong.
I do believe in markets. I also believe that the barrier to entry into the search market should be the quality of Google's product, not the fact that they spent absurd amounts per user on distribution contracts.
That is how markets have worked since Ugg invented a better way to start fires. It does not justify getting the government involved.
The whole concept of monopoly and anti-competitive behavior is fatally flawed. Not only is it a very bad subject for law or regulation at the very start, the laws implemented to enforce it are even worse. The Feds don't even have a Constitutional authority to go there. Knowing that will not change the course of bad government, however. I'm not holding my breath.
"The fact that Google search has an 80% market share even on Windows devices, where Edge is the default browser and Bing is the default search engine, demonstrates that consumers go out of their way to use Google because they believe it is the best option"
How dare you! How can we have democracy and social justice if we let people choose what they want?
It has nothing to do with 'the people.' What money do you contribute to Google? Nada.
Google's customers are businesses, and they do not allow businesses to compete unless they pay up to Google. That is what is anti-competitive.