Seven key points are in a proposed judgment to unlock Google’s monopolized markets.
A hearing in the spring is set for the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, which has jurisdiction. North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein, a participant in the drafting among more than three dozen state prosecutors, says healthy competition can be achieved.
“Google damaged the market and harmed competition for North Carolinians,” said the Democratic governor-elect. “These steps would help restore healthy competition and ensure that Google has to play by the same rules as everyone else again.”
The filing was made on Wednesday.
As proposed:
• Google will not be allowed to pay to be the initial default search engine on any phone, device or browser.
• Google must share data and information with rival companies the proposal says it unlawfully obtained through monopolization.
• Google would divest its Chrome browser.
• Google will not be allowed to make Google Search or Google AI mandatory on Android devices.
• Google will have to give publishers an opt out in regard to data collected to help train Google’s AI models or provide Generative AI answers.
• Google will fund a public awareness campaign that informs consumers on choices for search engines.
• A five-member technical committee would implement, monitor and enforce the remedies for 10 years.
Google was sued in December 2020. On Aug. 5, Judge Amit Mehta ruled Google violated federal antitrust laws.
The hearing is April 22.