STATE OF COLORADO et al v. GOOGLE LLC
Case Number:
1:20-cv-03715
Court:
Nature of Suit:
Judge:
Firms
- Berkowitz Lichtstein
- Dechert LLP
- Foley & Lardner
- Orrick Herrington
- Patterson Belknap
- Ropes & Gray
- Williams & Connolly
- Wilson Sonsini
Companies
Government Agencies
- Commonwealth of Massachusetts
- State of Maryland
- State of Nevada
- State of Tennessee
- U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia
Sectors & Industries:
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November 07, 2023
Google Exec Says It Needed To Catch Up On Travel Offerings
A Google executive told the D.C. federal court overseeing the government's search monopolization trial Tuesday that the company fell behind its competitors in the travel industry and had to work hard to catch up.
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November 06, 2023
DuckDuckGo Parity Unlikely To Sway Google Users, SVP Says
A Google senior vice president defended the company's privacy and security track record Monday in D.C. federal court as based on extensive consumer protection and choice, combating U.S. Department of Justice antitrust allegations that a lack of real competition short-circuited key features.
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November 03, 2023
Google Expert Says Amazon, Yelp Count As Real Competitors
An economist continued Friday in D.C. federal court to defend Google's claim that Yelp, Expedia and Amazon are direct competitors for search, despite intense questioning by a U.S. Department of Justice attorney intent on showing that if that competition were the real dynamic, it would be meaningless for Google to ink deals giving it default status on iPhones, Androids and browsers.
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November 02, 2023
Google Judge Homes In On Browsers And General Queries
A D.C. federal judge pressed a Google expert economist Thursday to explain why he thinks Google competes broadly with Yelp, Expedia, Amazon and more, not just Bing and DuckDuckGo, when browsers incorporate only general search engines and when most searches aren't "commercial" queries easily placed in a specific vertical.
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November 01, 2023
Google VP Says Yelp, TikTok, Instagram Help Users Learn
A Google vice president backed company assertions Wednesday that it faces fierce competition from social media and specialized search providers, arguing in D.C. federal court that instead of an overwhelming search monopolist described by the U.S. Department of Justice, Google is just one of many tools users can choose.
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October 31, 2023
Google Search Head Feared Money Was All Co. Thought About
A Google senior vice president tried to describe the company in D.C. federal court Tuesday as a hub of innovation focused on improving technology and the user experience above all else, only to face Justice Department questioning about his concerns that money was trumping that experience.
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October 30, 2023
Google CEO Admits Apple Deal To Be Default Is 'Valuable'
Google CEO Sundar Pichai took the stand Monday to defend the contracts making Google the default search engine on every iPhone and Android device, only to face heady Justice Department questioning over Google claims minimizing the value of default status and the cudgel used when Google was threatened by Microsoft or Apple.
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October 27, 2023
Google Trial Reveals $26B Spent On Search Distribution
Google paid over $26.3 billion for search distribution in 2021 and $18.5 billion in 2020, according to numbers a D.C. federal judge refused to redact Friday from the Justice Department case targeting the contracts that make Google the default search engine on every iPhone, Android smartphone and Firefox browser.
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October 26, 2023
Google Competes With Amazon 'Every Day,' SVP Says
A Google senior vice president pushed back Thursday on U.S. Department of Justice arguments that the company has tremendous market power because it competes only narrowly, with one-stop shop search providers like Bing and DuckDuckGo, with the executive contending that on the contrary, Google competes constantly with vertical providers like Amazon.com and Hotels.com.
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October 26, 2023
Google Search Judge Orders More Public Access To Evidence
The judge overseeing the government's search monopolization case against Google set up a process for reporters requiring quicker access to evidence presented during the ongoing trial after a request from The New York Times and other media outlets.