“Google it.”
The phrase has become shorthand for looking something up on the internet, and it’s no surprise why. Google is the default search engine almost everywhere you look, from your phone to computers or tablets.
Even if you don’t start your search at the tech giant’s website, there’s a good chance you’ll eventually get redirected there.
And it’s no coincidence that’s the case. Google has spent billions of dollars ensuring it’s the go-to search engine.
It’s also a strategy the Department of Justice argues is “anticompetitive and exclusionary” in a landmark trial for Big Tech kicking off today.
Insider’s Hugh Langley, our resident Google expert, details what’s at stake in the antitrust case between the DOJ and Google. The trial is the biggest to hit the tech industry since the government sued Microsoft in the late 1990s.
Back then, the DOJ alleged Microsoft was forcing PC manufacturers to make its Internet Explorer the default browser on their computers, thereby stifling competition.
Starting today, the DOJ will argue Google squashed its competition by paying Apple and others to be the default search provider, all while deterring users from rival services.
Google argues, among other things, that it’s not illegal to be a strong product everyone likes.
“People don’t use Google because they have to — they use it because they want to,” Google’s president of global affairs, Kent Walker, told Hugh in a statement.
Walker also pointed to how much has changed in the almost three years since this case was first filed, including the rise of AI, which represents more competition for Google.
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