HomeBusinessHow a breakup could rock Google (and the tech world).

How a breakup could rock Google (and the tech world).

There’s a lot at stake if the Justice Department succeeds in breaking up his empire, from control of his search data and Android operating system to the loss of his Chrome browser.

But the biggest threat the company faces is a search business that is deeply intertwined with parent company Alphabet’s (GOOG, GOOGL) technology ecosystem.

Of the $307.3 billion in revenue Google earned in 2023, $175 billion came solely from that ad-driven search engine business. The DOJ wants to impose dozens of restrictions on how Google connects that engine to consumers.

Other parts of Alphabet could also be affected. The DOJ also asked for a ban on the company from favoring its video subsidiary YouTube, which is part of the YouTube Ads business unit.

That unit, which generated $31.3 billion in revenue by 2023, makes money through ads that appear on and around YouTube videos. Google Search promotes YouTube video links in response to user queries.

Google’s digital advertising business, a division that would generate $31.5 billion in revenue by 2023, could also be jeopardized by a restriction of search results in favor of YouTube. Both advertisers and content creators use Google’s buyer and seller platforms to target consumers and monetize video content.

It will be up to District of Columbia Judge Amit Mehta, who sided with the DOJ monopoly argument in a lawsuit that concluded earlier this year, to approve the plaintiffs’ proposals. That could include the sale of Google’s Chrome browser and a divestiture of the Android mobile operating system.

Even investments in artificial intelligence that will pay off in the future could be threatened. Prosecutors also called on Google to divest within six months of any investment or ownership in competing search-based AI products and competing search text advertising technology products.

That would force Google to end its partnership with generative AI startup Anthropic. Google has invested $2 billion in Anthropic and at the same time hired the founders of another AI startup, Character.AI.

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Taken together, the Justice Department’s requests would dramatically change the technology landscape. Some legal experts said Mehta is unlikely to agree to any of the prosecutors’ proposals.

Judge Amit Mehta, of the US District Court for the District of Columbia, will decide whether to break up Google. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images) · Mark Wilson via Getty Images

“I think it’s quite unlikely that the government will be successful in obtaining these things,” Erik Hovenkamp, ​​an antitrust professor at Columbia Law School, told Yahoo Finance.

“In particular, I don’t expect the court to order any divestiture. Contrary to popular belief, antitrust rarely breaks up monopolies.”

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