Alphabet’s (GOOGL) Google broke antitrust law, a U.S. federal judge ruled Monday, saying that Google Search held an illegal monopoly.
Judge Amit Mehta ruled in favor of the Department of Justice (DOJ) in a suit first filed in 2020, finding that Google violated the Sherman Act by “maintaining its monopoly in two product markets in the United States—general search services and general text advertising—through its exclusive distribution agreements.”
Through distribution agreements, Google Search is the default search engine in browsers like Apple’s (AAPL) Safari.
The judge’s decision finds Google guilty of violating antitrust law, but has not yet determined punitive action.
The U.S. government could decide to take action to curb Google’s influence over the search market or break up the business, which may benefit Google Search competitors like Microsoft’s (MSFT) Bing or OpenAI’s recently announced SearchGPT.
The decision marks a major win for the DOJ as …