The Daily - U.S. v. Google
Episode Date: September 11, 2023For years, the government has been trying to rein in Big Tech, pursuing some of the largest and most powerful companies on the internet. This week, the government takes on Google in the first monopoly... trial of the modern internet era.David McCabe, who covers technology policy for The Times, discusses the case against the internet giant and what it might mean for the future if the it loses.Guest: David McCabe, a technology policy correspondent for The New York Times.Background reading: The 10-week trial amps up efforts to rein in Big Tech by targeting the core search business that turned Google into a $1.7 trillion behemoth.A federal judge said that the Justice Department could not move forward with a number of claims in antitrust complaints, narrowing the scope of the trial.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi, and this is The Daily.
For years, the government has been trying to rein in big tech,
pursuing some of the biggest and most powerful companies on the Internet.
This week, the government takes on one of those companies
in the first monopoly trial of the Internet era.
Today, my colleague David McCabe
on the government's case against Google
and what it might mean for the future if it wins.
It's Monday, September 11th.
So David, this week, in a federal court in Washington, D.C.,
the Justice Department is making its case against Google.
What's this all about?
The government has become increasingly obsessed with this question
of whether the tech giants, including Google, got so big by breaking laws that were designed to reign in corporations more than a century ago.
And by doing that, have they hurt consumers? Have they hurt other companies, smaller companies that are coming up with innovative ideas?
And this week, government lawyers are going to walk into a courtroom and begin to make the case that Google has broken the law. And this is the first time the Justice Department is trying to do this with
a tech giant in decades. The last time was when they took Microsoft to court in 1998. And then
the tech industry changed. The internet created these giant companies that built big platforms
for how we access information and culture and communicate.
And Google is probably more emblematic of that era of the internet
than any other company.
Its name literally became a verb synonymous with what it does.
And this case isn't just going to be about the last era of technology.
It's also going to be about the next era of technology. It's also going to be about the next era of technology.
Because hanging over this case are developments like artificial intelligence and questions about
whether companies like Google are poised, because they have been so dominant, to also dominate
the next era of technology. So what is the actual case here? I mean, what exactly is the government's
argument here about how Google is hurting consumers?
I mean, usually you think, you know, monopolies are bad because they raise consumer prices.
But Google, of course, is free.
You're right.
And that makes this case unusual.
But the government says that basically three groups of people are being harmed here.
That Google has this monopoly over online search.
And crucially,
that it's illegally abused that monopoly, first to shut out its rivals, think startups,
or even a company like Microsoft that make rival search engines. And that that's led to this
absence of choice, that when people go to search, that Google is really the main clear option for
them to use. And that Justin Martin said that has hurt two other groups of people.
That it's hurt advertisers who do pay to use Google's advertising services.
That Google is able, because they don't have much of a choice,
to charge them potentially higher prices.
And then the Justice Department is also saying
that consumers, you and me,
who do use Google for free,
have been hurt in ways that can't necessarily be quantified
by price.
That they're potentially hurt when it comes to the quality of search results, and that they're potentially hurt
when it comes to the policies that Google is able to impose upon them. Google, of course,
hoovers up personal data from anyone who uses the service in order to target advertisements,
because that's how they make money. And the Justice Department is saying that one of the
reasons they're able to so aggressively collect the personal data of their users is because they
have all of this power and there aren't that many other choices if you want to use Google
and you're concerned about your privacy. So basically, they're saying that Google has kind
of blotted out other companies that could be providing the marketplace with products that
would ultimately
be better for us, like taking away our choice, essentially.
That's exactly right.
And it gets at the core of what these antitrust laws are about, because the government believes
that if there's a fair competition on the merits, that consumers end up with more choice,
they end up with better products, they end up paying less money for products
because companies are incentivized, right,
to offer something better to consumers,
to treat other people in the marketplace fairly.
It's actually not illegal in the United States
to simply have a monopoly.
If consumers were just choosing Google
because they had access to a number of really good options,
and they just thought Google was the best, and Google had a monopoly as a result.
That would be fine under the law.
What is illegal in the United States is getting that monopoly or keeping that monopoly
by illegally excluding your competitors.
And that is exactly what the government says Google has done here.
In other words, that Google is dominant not because they offer the best product, but because they used
their weight and their dominance to suppress their competitors. Okay, so walk me through what the
government is alleging that Google did to suppress competition. So to understand the core of the
government's case, it's helpful to think about your smartphone. Okay. So I have an iPhone.
Often when I'm searching for information, I open the browser on my iPhone, which is
the default browser, the one that Apple makes is called Safari.
And I open Safari.
And, you know, there's that little bar at the top of the browser, right, where you usually
write in mytimes.com.
Right.
I just search.
I put my search query there.
And that, by default, goes to Google.
And actually, this is true on a lot of different smartphones. And the reason why is that Google
has these contracts, these agreements with Apple, with Mozilla, which makes Firefox,
with people who make smartphones, even with wireless carriers, to be, in different ways,
the default search engine on the smartphone.
Like, you don't have to decide which search engine you use, right?
It's just there. It's Google.
By default, it's Google.
And what the Justice Department says is that this web of contracts,
which consumers don't think about.
Definitely not.
These contracts actually were an illegal means of maintaining its power in search because they so powerfully drive consumers to use Google rather than other search engines.
So how exactly did Google come to be this default search engine in so many other products that
aren't Google products? Like, walk me through what they did to get these deals.
First of all, they pay billions of dollars. These deals are thought to be incredibly valuable.
And there's a number of different ways that this works. The most prominent at the trial will
probably be its agreements with Apple and Mozilla,
because so many people use their browser.
Apple, of course, is its own giant company with a big profile.
But Google also has these other agreements with smartphone makers that use its Android operating system
to be basically pre-installed as an app on those phones.
So maybe some phones have a search bar on the home screen.
That could, by default, be Google.
So there are a lot of different ways that people search
across their mobile devices.
But what the government is alleging is that in all these cases,
whether it's your browser, whether it's an app on the home screen
of your smartphone,
that Google has used these contracts to basically lock up that real estate. If you think about it as like the best real estate on Main Street, that they have locked up that real estate using these
contracts. Google has that fancy corner office. Google has every one of those stores, the ones
that you want to just walk into. Exactly. And the one that it's importantly easiest to walk into,
that you want to just walk into.
Exactly.
And the one that it's importantly easiest to walk into, right?
That it's the one next to your parking spot.
So it's the one you're most likely to go into because it's right there.
And that a lot of consumers,
when they search for information,
they just go with the default.
And as a result, these agreements,
the Justice Department has said,
are by far the best way to get search queries.
Okay, but David, hold on. Like, why should I care whether Google is the default search engine
on my phone? I mean, you know, just speaking for myself here, but like in general,
I like Google search engine. And I'd imagine a lot of other people feel the same way. So
how does this move by Google represent the harm to me, like Jane Consumer,
that the government is alleging? This is where we get back to that idea of choice.
So the Justice Department says that there's a really pernicious cycle at play here,
that Google has so many users that it's able to collect more data than anyone else it competes
with to make its search results better, and competes with to make its search results better.
And that because it can make its search results
better than anybody else,
that users come to Google even more often,
continuing the cycle.
And what the Justice Department is saying
is that these agreements to make Google
the default on a smartphone
put that process on speed, on overdrive,
and only contribute to increasing Google's scale and
size, which in turn, it's able to use to be more valuable to users and elbow out competitors.
So basically, they're the default on all of our products. We use it without really choosing or
thinking about it. And the fact that we all use it means that their dominance is multiplied, right? Like exponentially, like as you say, it puts it on speed,
making it harder and harder for other companies to compete with them.
That's right. That's exactly what the Justice Department is arguing here. They're saying that
because Google has this compounded dominance that's in part the result of agreements that they say break the law,
that has allowed them to suppress other competitors
that might actually offer consumers
options that they want more than Google.
So take, for example,
there's a company called DuckDuckGo,
and they make a search engine
that's whole sort of value proposition
is that it collects less data than Google does about them.
Now, the Justice Department is arguing that companies like DuckDuckGo could offer benefits
to consumers, could offer choices to consumers about how much their data is collected,
but that that gets short-circuited by this cycle of dominance juiced by illegal agreements that Google has engaged in.
Got it.
So what does Google say to all of this?
I mean, what do you expect its defense to be
based on your reporting?
So do you remember how you said that you like using Google,
people like using Google,
that you like because the product's good?
That is Google's defense.
Okay.
That people who use Google choose Google because they find it helpful,
not because they've used illegal agreements to force their way to the front of the line.
We're just good, guys.
Yeah, that they are winning because they've made the best product and that it's a product
that people find helpful, that people choose to come to Google because it's a high-quality product.
And that's why these companies,
Apple, Samsung, Mozilla,
choose to partner with Google
to make the search engine the default
because Google says they're the best.
But they also say that people do have other choices,
that they can change the default search engines
with only a few taps on their smartphone.
So that these agreements, at the heart of the case,
aren't even exclusive at all.
And they say that they're not even as dominant
as DOJ claims in the first place.
How's that?
So the Justice Department says that Google
has around a 90% market share.
When you define their competition
as what is called general search.
So that means like Bing or DuckDuckGo.
Basically, DOJ says one-stop shop search engines
where you might go for a whole variety of things.
But Google is saying we have a smaller share
of the search engine market
because we compete not just with the one-stop shops,
but we compete with Amazon
when it comes to searching for a product online.
We compete with TikTok or Reddit
when it comes to answering other queries.
We compete with Spotify or ChatGPT.
So the Justice Amendment basically says,
Google is a big fish in a small pond.
And Google says, it's not a pond, it's a giant ocean.
Google's saying you got the wrong body of water.
Exactly, yeah.
Google is saying you're looking at the wrong universe.
Right.
And if the judge comes to agree with that idea,
it's going to be really hard for the Justice Department to make its case.
Because the judge in this trial first has to decide,
is Google a monopoly here at all?
Do they have monopoly power?
And that will hinge on how big or small the world of competitors it has is, right? If you're a small dot in a big sea of
competitors, it's a lot harder to have monopoly power than if you are the same size dot in a tiny
puddle of competitors. And once the judge figures out where he falls on that question,
if Google does have monopoly power, then he'll have to figure out, did these agreements break
the law? Did they step over the line from aggressive growth in the business to an illegal
and unreasonable restraint on its competition? In other words, did they kind of cheat their way to the front of the
pack? So in no way is the DOJ's case a slam dunk. It's going to be tough. It's going to be tough.
And, you know, these cases are significant. There are millions of documents that have been
turned over as part of the evidence process. There are going to be witnesses that include
corporate executives from Google, but also from competitors from these companies that over as part of the evidence process. There are going to be witnesses that include corporate
executives from Google, but also from competitors from these companies that it signs agreements
with. There's going to be testimony from economists who get paid sometimes as much as lawyers in these
cases to provide expert analysis to a judge. And the judge in this case is going to have to look
at all of that and figure out where to draw the line on,
does Google have the power that the Justice Department says it does? And did they step over
into illegal territory in how they maintained it? And what's really new about this is that it's the
first time they've tried to bring one of these cases in this era of the modern internet platforms.
to bring one of these cases in this era of the modern internet platforms. Google,
Meta, which owns Facebook, WhatsApp, and Instagram, Amazon, Apple, they all operate big online platforms. And the government has never before had a trial like this,
where they've aired out their concerns about how those platforms got so powerful
in public and in the kind of minute detail that we'll see over
the next 10 weeks. So the judge is going to have to roll one way or another. But whether Google
wins or the Justice Department wins, it's going to be a big deal for the technology industry.
We'll be right back.
so david this is a big and novel case and totally unclear what the outcome is going to be let's talk about the possible scenarios here so what would it mean if the judge sides with google
yeah so the devil will be in the details of his ruling.
It's a complex case.
He's going to have to make a lot of individual calls that will add up to a decision.
But broadly, I think there's sort of two lenses through which a Google victory would be viewed.
The first is from sort of a Silicon Valley perspective.
If the judge rules for Google, it's possible that he'll find that these harms that DOJ has described,
that they say happened as a result of Google's kind of rapacious and illegal growth,
that those harms weren't there.
And that could send a message to Google and other Silicon Valley companies that this increased government oversight in recent years is really more bark than bite.
And that gets us to the second lens,
which is how does Washington view a Google victory?
I think if Google wins,
one thing you may hear in Washington
from people who are skeptical of the tech companies
is that it proves that these antitrust laws,
which have been interpreted in the last several decades
as being very narrowly focused on instances
where consumers are harmed, particularly through price, that that interpretation of these laws really is not suited
to taking on Silicon Valley, and that that understanding of the law fails to capture
potential ways that consumers might be harmed when it comes to the collection of their data,
the quality of the product they use, and the choices they have available to them.
Right, we live in a data world now,
and that's essentially the currency.
That's exactly right.
We are now in an economy where some of the biggest
and most prominent companies
give their product to consumers for free,
but collect a lot of their personal data.
And the question is, can the laws handle that?
Okay, so what about the other
side of things? So say the government wins the case. What happens to Google? So that is the big
question. And it's one that the judge won't even consider until he's decided whether or not Google
has broken the law. But if he does find that Google broke the law, that DOJ was right, if he rules in
the government's favor, there are a couple different routes that the government has traditionally taken
to try and address concerns about corporations that have broken antitrust laws. The most radical
option available to a judge is breaking up a company. Like actually breaking up Google?
is breaking up a company.
Like actually breaking up Google?
Well, this has happened before.
So in the 80s,
AT&T agreed to break itself up into seven regional companies
under pressure from the Justice Department.
They were known as Mob Bell.
These companies were known as the Baby Bells.
And there are people who really believe
that that was successful
in introducing competition
to what had been
an extremely concentrated phone business. But like, is that the right analogy? I mean, that was a phone company
with regional carriers. This is an internet company. Like, is that apples to apples?
It's not. And Google search business isn't necessarily something you could split up
like AT&T, like Standard Oil at the turn of the century along regional lines.
And it will be a tough question for the court of how you would use a kind of structural change in order to stop the behavior and harms that the Justice Department has identified in its lawsuit.
Okay, so what's the other potential fix in the event that the government wins?
So what's the other potential fix in the event that the government wins?
So a court could also basically demand that Google change its behavior.
So the Justice Department has not said a lot about what kind of fixes they want in this case. But they have asked the court to stop Google from just doing the things it describes in the lawsuit.
things it describes in the lawsuit. So that could mean new restrictions on the kinds of agreements that Google can enter to be these default search providers on a smartphone. Meaning those agreements
with Apple and with other companies, the ones that give Google that prime real estate right
next to the parking spot, those would either disappear or change to make competition more fair.
That's exactly right. And one other thing that's
been tried in Europe is presenting some smartphone users with a screen that allows them to choose
their search engine. So there's not the same kind of hard and fast default. Okay, but if all of this
boils down to just a few more clicks on a setup screen, like, what was it all for? I mean, does
it really solve what the
government was saying is at issue here, which is tech is too big, and by definition, that is a
problem? Ultimately, the question will be, after all the legal wrangling is done, after the judge
decides on a fix in this case, did it change Google's behavior? Did it change the way they
approach building their business? And the stakes for that
become a lot bigger when you think about the future, and especially when you think about
the future of artificial intelligence, where Google is already a major player.
What do you mean? Explain that.
Yeah. So Google has a lot of information.
Google Search is one of the biggest compendiums of information on the planet.
And information is like rocket fuel for artificial intelligence.
So the question is, does their dominance in search lead to potential future dominance in artificial intelligence?
And does the court's fix, if it rules in favor of the Justice Department, ripple
outward to the rest of the industry? Does it make Silicon Valley more competitive at a time when
companies across Silicon Valley are in this heating up battle to define the next era of the internet?
David, thank you.
Thank you.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know. Thank you. The hardest-hit settlements were in the high Atlas Mountains, outside the city of Marrakesh, where the few roads were blocked by debris.
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The quake, which had a magnitude of 6.8 on the Richter scale, was the strongest to hit the area in a century.
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In the women's final, the 19-year-old American Coco Goff chased and lunged toward the ball,
rattling Irina Sabalenka of Belarus and sending Arthur
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to it.
And now I'm really burning so bright right now.
The remarkable win established golf as the new face of women's tennis in America.
And...
In the men's final, Novak Djokovic of Serbia cemented his status as an all-time great,
defeating Daniil Medvedev of Russia in the men's singles final.
24 and counting!
24 and he still wants more!
The win, the 24th major title of Djokovic's career,
gives him the most men's Grand Slams in tennis history.
Today's episode was produced by
Olivia Natt, Muj Zaydi,
Diana Nguyen, and Shannon Lin.
It was edited by Mark
George, with help from Paige Cowett.
Contains original music
by Dan Powell, Alicia
Baitube, and Marian Lozano,
and was engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
Our theme music is by
Jim Brumberg and Ben Lansford of Wonderly.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Sabrina Tavernisi.
See you tomorrow.