The Justice Department told a federal judge Tuesday that it ask for a breakup of Google-parent Alphabet (GOOGL) as a possible antitrust remedy.
The Tuesday night court filing also said DOJ antitrust officials could recommend that Google open up its core data that it uses for search research and artificial intelligence tools.
The Justice Department "is considering behavioral and structural remedies that would prevent Google from using products such as Chrome, Play, and Android to advantage Google search and Google search-related products and features -- including emerging search access points and features, such as artificial intelligence -- over rivals or new entrants," the agency said in the filing
On Aug. 5, Judge Amit Mehta ruled that Google illegally maintained a monopoly over online search services and prevented revivals from developing their own products. A key part of the ruling centered over multibillion payments that Google makes to Apple (AAPL) and others to be the default search engine on the iPhone and browsers such as Firefox.
Those payments may be barred as part of the judge's ultimate ruling.
Soon after the ruling, there were reports that the DOJ was considering a Google breakup.
Mehta plans to begin the remedy stage of the trial by spring 2025 and issue a ruling by next August.
Google intends to appeal Mehta's ruling, but can't do so until he issues a ruling.
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