Will the Google antitrust ruling shake up the internet?

And what does that mean for users?

Illustration of a wrecking ball smashing the Google G icon
Google could be forced to share its "secret sauce" with other search companies to let those rivals "make more appealing search engines."
(Image credit: Illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images)

Google's big defeat in a federal antitrust case "could change how you search the internet," said USA Today. Judge Amit P. Mehta on Monday ruled that the tech giant "illegally monopolized online search and advertising" by paying hardware companies like Apple and Samsung to make its search engine the default option on phone and computer web browsers. Those practices helped give more than 90% of the search market to Google. Now? "The court will have to decide whether Google should be broken up in some way," said one analyst.

"Very likely there will be a remedy that changes the way that we engage with search on our phones and on our devices," Vanderbilt Law School's Rebecca Allensworth told PBS NewsHour. It's possible the judge could impose the "nuclear option" of breaking Google into smaller chunks, said the BBC, separating the search business from other products like its Chrome browser and Android smartphone line. But it's "easier to imagine" a future where internet users simply see a "choice screen" asking whether they'd like to use Google or Bing search when they open a browser.

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Joel Mathis, The Week US

Joel Mathis is a writer with 30 years of newspaper and online journalism experience. His work also regularly appears in National Geographic and The Kansas City Star. His awards include best online commentary at the Online News Association and (twice) at the City and Regional Magazine Association.