Current:Home > ScamsMicrosoft CEO says unfair practices by Google led to its dominance as a search engine -VitalWealth Strategies
Microsoft CEO says unfair practices by Google led to its dominance as a search engine
View
Date:2025-04-12 16:13:45
WASHINGTON (AP) — Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said Monday that unfair tactics used by Google led to its dominance as a search engine, tactics that in turn have thwarted his company’s rival program, Bing.
Nadella testified in packed Washington, D.C., courtroom as part of the government’s landmark antitrust trial against Google’s parent company, Alphabet. The Justice Department alleges Google has abused the dominance of its ubiquitous search engine to throttle competition and innovation at the expense of consumers, allegations that echo a similar case brought against Microsoft in the late 1990s.
Nadella said Google’s dominance was due to agreements that made it the default browser on smartphones and computers. He downplayed the idea that artificial intelligence or more niche search engines like Amazon or social media sites have meaningfully changed the market in which Microsoft competes with Google.
Nadella said users fundamentally don’t have much choice in switching out of default web browsers on cell phones and computers.
“We are one of the alternatives but we’re not the default,” he said.
Nadella was called to the witness stand as the biggest U.S. antitrust trial in the past quarter-century moved into its fourth week of testimony before U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta, who isn’t expected to issue a decision in the case until next year.
The Justice Department’s antitrust case against Google centers on deals the company struck with Apple and other device makers to use Google’s search engine.
In the 1990s, Microsoft faced accusations it set up its Windows software in ways that walled off applications made by other tech companies, just as Google is now facing accusations of shelling out billions of dollars each year to lock in its search engine as the go-to place for finding online information on smartphones and web browsers.
In an ironic twist, the constraints and distractions posed by the government’s antitrust case against Microsoft helped provide a springboard for Google to turn its search engine into a dominant force. By the time Microsoft started its scramble to develop its own search engine, Google had already become synonymous with looking things up on the internet.
But Microsoft nevertheless has poured billions of dollars trying to mount a serious challenge to Google with Bing and, at one point, even tried to buy Yahoo for more than $40 billion in a bid that was rejected while Steve Ballmer was still the software maker’s CEO.
Nadella, who was working at Microsoft during the late 1990s antitrust showdown with the Justice Department, succeeded Ballmer as CEO in 2014. During his tenure, he has steered to Microsoft huge gains in personal and cloud computing that have boosted the company’s stock price by nearly nine -fold since he took over while creating more than $2 trillion in shareholder wealth.
Despite all that success, he hasn’t been able to make any significant inroads in search against Google, with Bing still a distant second in the market.
veryGood! (86)
Related
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Inaugural Jazz Music Awards will be broadcast on PBS and PBS Passport with host Dee Dee Bridgewater
- Bernie Sanders: Israel is losing the war in public opinion
- Arctic report card points to rapid and dramatic impacts of climate change
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Passengers lodge in military barracks after Amsterdam to Detroit flight is forced to land in Canada
- SantaCons have flocks of Santas flooding city streets nationwide: See the Christmas chaos
- Can you guess the Dictionary.com 2023 word of the year? Hint: AI might get it wrong
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Kenya power outage sees official call for investigation into possible acts of sabotage and coverup
Ranking
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- Special counsel asks Supreme Court to decide whether Trump is immune from federal prosecution
- Swedish authorities say 5 people died when a construction elevator crashed to the ground
- Special counsel asks Supreme Court to decide whether Trump is immune from federal prosecution
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- 3 Florida middle school students hospitalized after showing signs of possible overdose
- Millions in opioid settlement funds sit untouched as overdose deaths rise
- Advice from a critic: Read 'Erasure' before seeing 'American Fiction'
Recommendation
Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
German prosecutors indict 27 people in connection with an alleged far-right coup plot
Bernie Madoff victims to get additional $158 million in restitution
UAW accuses Honda, Hyundai and VW of union-busting
PHOTO COLLECTION: AP Top Photos of the Day Wednesday August 7, 2024
Canadian police charge man accused of selling deadly substance with 14 new murder charges
Broadway audiences are getting a little bit younger and more diverse
RHOBH's Sutton Stracke Breaks Silence on Julia Roberts' Viral Name 'Em Reenactment