Google must share search data with rivals but avoids a Chrome divestiture. Judge allows Apple’s default search deal, shaping future Big Tech antitrust cases.
A federal judge’s remedy stops short of making meaningful changes to how we use our phones, computers and the web. By Brian X. Chen Brian X. Chen is The Times’s lead consumer technology writer and the ...
The judge’s decision positions Google to keep its search business running largely without interruption. By Tripp Mickle and Cecilia Kang Tripp Mickle reports on tech from San Francisco. Cecilia Kang ...
Microsoft Edge Canary is testing a persistent pop-up that appears on every tab, urging users to switch the default search ...
The judge rejected the Justice Department's effort to force Google to sell its popular Chrome browser, concluding the request was a bridge too far.
Google puts AI Mode in Chrome’s address bar with page-aware prompts, Gemini help across tabs, and stronger protections, rolling out in the U.S. first.
If you're regularly using Google, you may have noticed that the search results are not what they used to be. Google is pushing for AI integration in its search engine, and the results are not always ...
Google can keep its Chrome browser, but it can no longer have exclusive search deals and must share its search data with competitors. That’s the ruling from U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta in the ...
A federal judge ruled Tuesday against the U.S. government’s proposal that Google should sell its Chrome web browser to restore competition in online search, saving the tech giant from having to spin ...
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