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Google appeals US court ruling on search monopoly

By Thomson Reuters May 22, 2026 | 1:18 PM

By Jody Godoy

May 22 (Reuters) – Alphabet’s Google on Friday appealed a Washington federal judge’s ruling that it holds illegal ​monopolies in online search and related ‌advertising.

Here are some details:

• Google argued that U.S. Judge Amit Mehta made legal errors in his 2024 ruling, which found the company illegally blocked ‌competitors ​by paying billions of ⁠dollars annually to firms ⁠including Apple to be the default search engine on new devices.

• The arrangements did not prevent the device makers and ​browser developers from promoting rival search services like Microsoft’s Bing, Google argued.

• The ⁠company said it excelled ⁠in the market fairly by ​developing a “superior search engine through hard work, bold ​innovation, and shrewd business decisions.”

• The U.S. ‌Department of Justice is expected to file papers making its own arguments in July. A spokesperson for the DOJ declined ⁠to comment.

• Mehta had ordered Google to share some search data with competitors, potentially including artificial ⁠intelligence companies ‌such as OpenAI, to restore ⁠competition. An appeals court ruling in ​Google’s ‌favour would overturn that order.

• ​If Google ⁠loses at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, it could appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

(Reporting by Jody Godoy in New York; Editing by ​Sanjeev Miglani)