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Posted: 2025-05-03 21:47:30 UTC

This article contains some claims that remain unverified. While much of the content may be accurate, exercise care when relying on this information.
This article contains some claims that remain unverified. While much of the content may be accurate, exercise care when relying on this information.
Status
Last Updated
2025-05-03 21:47:49 UTC
Verified By
Rollup News
The U.S. is challenging Google's search empire, referencing a 2010 deal with Yahoo Japan to argue Google can share data but chooses not to. Google claims data sharing would harm privacy and their 'secret sauce,' while Mozilla (Firefox) risks extinction if their Google default search engine deal is banned.
Google's monopoly trial and potential breakup
Implications for Yahoo Japan and past data-sharing agreements
Mozilla's financial dependence on Google and potential extinction
Privacy concerns vs. data accessibility
U.S. government trying to break up Google's search empire
Google's resistance to sharing search data, citing privacy concerns
Mozilla's financial vulnerability if the Google deal is banned