this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2023
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[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Judge Amit Mehta will be deciding the case. I already have problems with Mehta’s actions and statements so far:

We can already see some problematic choices from Mehta. Google executives, including its CEO Sundar Pichai, have been found, in multiple cases, including this one, of destroying evidence related to potential antitrust violations. Apparently, chat logs involving discussions over antitrust show ‘that Pichai personally asked whether a chat group’s history could be turned off and then attempted to delete that message. A different judge in California sanctioned Google for this bad behavior, but not Mehta.

Judge Mehta doesn’t have a problem with Google destroying evidence related to the case??

[…] arguing that Google self-preferenced its own reviews ahead of Yelp’s, or its own travel services ahead of those like Expedia. Judge Meha tossed these claims, saying that service like Yelp and Expedia aren’t general search engines and are therefore not in the same market as Google.”

This was hard to hear. Google used its power as the only search engine in town to prioritize its other products (reviews) over its competitors. This is directly related to Google’s position in the search engine market and is an example important to the case for breaking the company up. To me this seems like a fundamental misunderstanding Mehta has about how Google’s products interoperate.

The case is likely to be appealed, probably all the way to the Supreme Court.

There is an appetite to break up these tech giants. By the public. Bipartisan support in Congress, and at the Executive level. This antitrust case was started in the Trump administration and has continued under Biden. I have this anxiety that with all this appetite, the months/years in trial, billions of dollars spent, that the deciders at the end of the day will be nine partisans (I’m one of the 58% of Americans who disapprove of the Supreme Court).

I hope my pessimism in this case is proven wrong and a strong decision is made against Google. It would set a precedent for other cases against tech giants.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Yeah, I agree. I'm curious to see how this case goes but also very nervous that I won't like how things settle

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I, I assume like a lot of people, have really shifted my opinion on google in the recent years. The product has begun to decline. Google has too much power. Most of all, I'm terrified that I will get banned from Google and lose my passwords and a good portion of my online identity. I don't use any mainstream social media except hacker news, lemmy, and linked in (i guess...) so losing my google account would be devastating.

The state of anti monopoly legislation in the US is sad. The Instagram buyout was probably a deal that shouldn't have gone through. Social media companies need to have some sort of rules that bar them from cloning each other's products. One issue though is that Youtube (for example) wasn't profitable for the first decade and a half of its existence. Youtube began turning profit like 5 years ago. I think a lot of these platforms aren't viable for such a long period of time that they really really benefit from being a part of a larger company.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

This isn't really related to the political discussion, but I wanted to mention that it might be worth making a bitwarden account and just backing up your current passwords there if you're concerned about them being all in one place. When I switched to bitwarden so my password manager wouldn't lock me into using chrome as my mobile browser, I didn't anticipate how easy it would be to copy all my passwords into bitwarden. I don't remember what the process was like, but you might even just be able to export your google passwords without using bitwarden at all, though they may not be in a helpful format- it might be worth looking into :)