Categories: RegulationWorkspace

Google Will Not Move To Dismiss US Antitrust Case

Google has told a court it does not plan to ask for the US government’s antitrust lawsuit to be dismissed, but intends to fight the allegations.

The US Department of Justice sued Google over alleged competition abuses in October, saying the company had illegally used its market dominance in search and advertising to hobble rivals. Google has denied wrongdoing.

On Friday Google said in a short court filing that it would refrain from filing to dismiss the lawsuit and would file an answer to the government’s complaint before 21 December.

Google and the Justice Department said they had failed to reach an agreement on how to protect confidential information supplied to the government by third parties, and would file statements on their positions by 13 November.

Antitrust

The case is the biggest challenge to a dominant tech company in decades, and has been compared to the Justice Department’s successful antitrust case against Microsoft of 1998 or its breakup of AT&T in the 1980s.

US communications regulator the FTC is also considering filing an antitrust lawsuit against Facebook, according to reports.

The FTC’s five members met on 22 October, shortly after the Justice Department filed its lawsuit against Google, to discuss its investigation of Facebook and whether the company had acquired competitors such as WhatsApp and Instagram in order to maintain its monopoly, according to multiple reports.

Tech dominance

Earlier in October the House Judiciary Committee recommended taking action to break up the big tech platforms, including Facebook, Amazon, Apple and Google, which together have a market value of around $5tn.

The US Senate Commerce Committee has also been looking into whether to make changes to a law that grants tech platforms legal immunity for their content moderation decisions.

In October Twitter chief executive Jack Dorsey, Google chief Sundar Pichai and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg appeared before the panel to face questions on the issue.

Matthew Broersma

Matt Broersma is a long standing tech freelance, who has worked for Ziff-Davis, ZDnet and other leading publications

Recent Posts

Apple Cuts Orders iPhone 16, Says Analyst

Industry supply chain analyst says Apple cut orders for the iPhone 16 for Q4 2024…

10 hours ago

LinkedIn Fined €310m By Irish Data Protection Commission

Heavy fine for LinkedIn, after Irish data protection watchdog cites GDPR violations with people's personal…

12 hours ago

CMA Begins Probe Into Alphabet Partnership With Anthropic

UK competition regulator begins phase one investigation into Alphabet's partnership with AI startup Anthropic

13 hours ago

TSMC Stops Supplying Customer, After Discovery Of Restricted Chip

After alerting the US of an attempt to circumvent US export controls, TSMC halts chip…

14 hours ago

Top Court Sides With Intel Over EU Antitrust Fine

Fresh win for Intel after Europe top court upholds annulment of billion-euro antitrust fine imposed…

18 hours ago

Perplexity Boss Surprised After New Corp Sues

News Corp surprises Perplexity, after the media group sued the AI search engine for allegedly…

19 hours ago