Google avoids Chrome and Android breakup but must end exclusive search default deals, and may have to share data with rivals. Google won't be broken up but must end exclusive default search deals.
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 ...
Google's search engine and Apple's iPhone changed the tech game in ways the world still hasn't fully quantified. Google is now commonly used as both a subject and a verb in grammatical terms, while ...
Both tech giants bring powerful, feature-packed browsers to the table, but only one can dominate your digital life. We break ...
After Mehta’s initial ruling, the Department of Justice (DoJ) demanded that Google divest itself of the Chrome web browser ...
The Department of Justice’s long-running case against Google, in which Judge Amit Mehta ruled in April that Google monopolized the digital advertising market on the open web (and reaffirmed that ...
The web is tired of getting harvested for chatbots.
Google investors were overjoyed on Wednesday in response to a long-awaited decision in a high-profile federal antitrust case against Google. On Tuesday, federal judge Amit P. Mehta of the U.S.
Don't want to fork over $30 for a one-year subscription to Windows 10 Extended Security Updates? Microsoft is offering a couple of ways to avoid the fee. But there's a catch.
Apple's Safari browser is exclusive to the company's own devices, but it brings plenty to the table. How does it stack up ...
The crypto market never sleeps, and neither should investors hunting for the next breakout star. Each week, new opportunities ...
Tom Snyder explores a judge's ruling that Google unlawfully cemented its search dominance through exclusionary deals.