Categories: BLOG2

Will The Anti-Monopoly Ruling Crack Open Google's Data?

It’s worth repeating — I am not a lawyer. Personally, I believe that Judge Mehta and his team were technically competent, conscientious, and even courageous at times. Google also wisely pulled back on exclusivity clauses post-verdict, which gave the appearance of compliance.

I am old enough to remember both the Microsoft and AT&T (“Ma Bell”) antitrust suits, and I am sympathetic to the difficulties of predicting how any remedy might impact the industry or even the overall U.S. economy. It’s also, as the court noted, very difficult to determine how much of Google’s market dominance was fairly won with investment and innovation.

The court was particularly swayed by the massive disruption in search that GenAI/LLMs pose, potentially opening up new competition. Specifically, they noted that GenAI has attracted a surge of investment in search, stating that: “The money flowing into this space, and how quickly it has arrived, is astonishing.” I don’t think many of us would argue with that point.

Here’s where I disagree. I strongly believe that the court missed its own point regarding Google’s monopolistic advantages. While competitors like OpenAI have certainly disrupted the search market and are aggressively pursuing search-like capabilities, Google’s infrastructure, index, and user data remain massive advantages. Google still maintains an enviable pool of machine learning and AI talent, and has pioneered key innovations in the space, including groundbreaking work in transformers and self-attention that drove the GenAI revolution. GenAI competitors have massive hurdles to overcome in the search market, and I believe that Judge Mehta’s ruling may have suffered, like most of the industry, from AI hype.

Ultimately, we can’t expect the industry landscape to be rewritten by a single ruling, even at the end of a 5-year case of this magnitude. These remedies are serious, and I suspect Google will think twice about pushing too close to the line of another antitrust action. Even by internet-industry standards, the next 2–3 years in search and GenAI seem impossible to predict, but I believe this ruling will become a noticeable weight on the shifting balance.

If you liked Will The Anti-Monopoly Ruling Crack Open Google's Data? by Dr. Peter J. Meyers Then you'll love Miami SEO Expert

Dr. Peter J. Meyers

Share
Published by
Dr. Peter J. Meyers

Recent Posts

How To Diversify Your Traffic Outside of Google SERPS

How to build a brand-led content strategy that drives demand outside searchYou’ll learn to move…

2 weeks ago

The Future of AI in Search | Whiteboard Friday Revisited With Britney Muller

Five years after this video was created, the idea that machine learning might be “far…

2 weeks ago

Stop Losing SEO Traffic: AI-Powered Strategies to Detect, Fix, and Drive [MozCon 2025 Speaker Series]

 I’ve spent the past year fielding the same panicked question from clients repeatedly: “Why is traffic…

3 weeks ago

How to Claim, Verify, and Manage Google Business Profiles at Scale

Claim and Verify All Listings with a Domain EmailWe all know how to claim and verify…

3 weeks ago

How To Automate Your BoFu Strategy With AI [Free Prompts, Templates & Workflows]

When Teal brought me in, their bottom-of-funnel content was barely moving the needle. Blog posts…

3 weeks ago

F*** Traffic: How To Prioritize Conversion Over Vanity Metrics

Clicks are down, and if you’re working in SEO right now, you’re probably stuck trying…

3 weeks ago