Google Appeals Antitrust Ruling, Says Apple Chose Its Search Engine 'Fair and Square' - MacRumors
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Google Appeals Antitrust Ruling, Says Apple Chose Its Search Engine 'Fair and Square'

Google today appealed a 2024 ruling that found it violated antitrust law by paying to be the default search engine on iPhones. In a filing with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, Google said the district court made an error when concluding that Google's search success was due to anything other than competition on merit.

Google Logo Feature Slack
Google suggested it surpassed competition through better innovation, more investments, and "just working harder," which is why Apple chose Google Search as its default search option on Apple devices.

Whether or not Google has monopoly power, Google did nothing that "harm[ed] the competitive process." It did not impede its rivals' opportunity to make—or Apple's and Mozilla's ability to choose—a better offer. Indeed, there is no finding—or even any evidence—that Google's customers would have chosen a rival, even in the absence of the challenged agreements. Google just prevailed in the marketplace fair and square.

The filing points out that Apple was free to distribute and promote rival search engines, with Google highlighting the alternative browser options that Apple offers in the Safari settings. Google suggests that any "exclusivity" interpreted by the district court was Apple's choice for "sound business reasons."

Google is asking the appeals court to undo the remedies that were put in place to address its search monopoly. Google was told to share search data, offer information on user interaction, and syndicate its results to competing companies, which it will need to start doing barring a successful appeal.

While Google is aiming for the entire ruling to be thrown out, Google also wants generative AI companies like OpenAI excluded from receiving data. Google says AI products "did not even exist" during the period covered in the DoJ's filing, so it makes no sense for them to receive search data. Google further said that AI companies are "already succeeding as wildly as any technology in human history without any need to free-ride on Google's success."

Google pays Apple billions of dollars each year to be the default Safari search engine, and the deal was a major component in the antitrust lawsuit that the U.S. Department of Justice brought against Google. Apple and Google's search engine deal could have been addressed in the remedies applied to Google, but the court did not prevent Google from making search agreements.

While Google is barred from entering into exclusive contracts for search engine distribution, it is still allowed to pay Apple to be a search engine option on iPhone. The DoJ also wanted Google to be forced to sell its Chrome browser and possibly offload the Android operating system, but neither of those consequences were implemented.

The remedies in the DoJ vs. Google case went into effect on February 3, but Google hasn't been required to provide data yet because implementation details have not been worked out. The five-member Technical Committee set up by the judge overseeing the case has not outlined license terms or privacy safeguards, nor has criteria for which companies qualify as competitors been established.

Oral arguments for Google's appeal haven't been scheduled, so we're unlikely to hear more on the issue until late 2026 or early 2027.

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Top Rated Comments

sw1tcher Avatar
1 day ago at 01:29 pm

In a filing with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, Google said the district court made an error when concluding that Google's search success was due to anything other than competition on merit.

Google suggested it surpassed competition through better innovation, more investments, and "just working harder," which is why Apple chose Google Search as its default search option on Apple devices.
If Apple freely and without any outside influence decided to make Google the default search option, then Alphabet wasted hundreds of billions over the years by paying Apple and shareholders should sue Alphabet for mismanagement.

But that's not what happened.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
1 day ago at 01:19 pm
FYI monopolies are not inherently illegal in USA. And Google just has a way better product.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Mrkevinfinnerty Avatar
21 hours ago at 03:51 pm
They are basically paying Apple to stay out of the search business.

Monopolists paying other companies to not launch products is never going to be good for the end user.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Abazigal Avatar
19 hours ago at 05:52 pm

Why’s Google paying so much money then. Can anyone answer this?
My guess:

1) Defaults ultimately still matter. Yes, the majority of users like will still have chosen google search anyways, and Google wanted to eliminate any remaining chance that they might try a competing search engine alternative (however minuscule that may be).

While you can switch your default search engine, it's still limited to a few choices, and doesn't seem to support the newer options like Kagi. The best customers use iOS, most iOS users use Safari, Apple controls Safari, and so Google has to go where the money is.

2) It's an incentive to Apple to not bother with coming up with their own search engine offering.

Part of me believes that when Apple replaced google maps with their own maps app in 2012, it traumatised Google so much that their executives continue to suffer from PTSD even today. It taught them them for all their market share, for all their profits, and for all the power they might wield in Silicon Valley, they are just another app on iOS. One that Apple has no qualms about excising or replacing at the snap of a finger. It showed them who really held all the power in that relationship.

Would Apple have done differently had Google not paid them billions a year? Maybe, maybe not, but it seemed that the prospect of FAFO was a risk that Google executives would rather not take.

That to me is Apple's greatest strength - their ecosystem. Google Maps was good, and they had no issues with getting rid of it in favour of their own mapping solution, which while vastly inferior at the start, quickly improved to become a credible alternative today (in developed countries at least). I remember reading somewhere that in the US, more users use the Maps app over Google Maps, in part because Maps is the pre-installed default and is integrated with iOS to an extent that Google will never enjoy.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
sully54 Avatar
21 hours ago at 03:58 pm
Judge: "your deal with apple violates anti-trust law"

Google: DISREGARD
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
23 hours ago at 01:55 pm
Hey Google, pay me billions of dollars and I’ll choose Google Search “fair and square” too! Until that happens, though, I’ve switched to DDG.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)