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    ETtech Explainer: Google vs US in search monopoly case

    After hearing arguments from both the US government and Google, US federal Judge Amit P Mehta gave his ruling on the suit filed to break up the search major as it broke antitrust law. The judgment could reshape how Google strikes deals and continues to maintain its supremacy in online search.

    Court blocks Chrome sale! Google stock shoots up after major antitrust ruling

    Google stock surged nearly 8% to $211.35 after a landmark court ruling spared Chrome from a forced breakup, adding over $150 billion in market value and marking Alphabet’s strongest rally of 2025.

    Apple wins big! Judge refuses to kill its $20 billion Google search goldmine, stock soars

    Apple won a big court boost as a judge allowed its search deal with Google to continue. This deal is very important for Apple because it gives huge money every year. The decision also made Apple stock rise. Google also gained after the ruling. The case is part of a bigger fight over search power.

    Google's AI rivals get a boost from data-sharing order, but tech giant far from routed

    While Google was spared the devastating outcome of having to sell its popular Chrome browser and Android operating system, U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta's ruling was a nod to regulators' efforts to level the playing field for companies who have invested billions to boost their AI business.

    Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot talks about Musk assassination, terrorist attacks, drug making in leaked private chats by xAI

    Elon Musk's xAI faced scrutiny. It published Grok chatbot transcripts. Over 370,000 conversations were exposed. Users were unaware of public indexing. Sensitive data, including passwords and medical queries, became searchable. This raised privacy and ethical concerns. Experts criticized xAI's data handling. The incident highlights challenges in AI governance. Similar issues surfaced with other AI providers.

    Brands press enter; GEO to show up more in AI searches

    Data suggests that LLM-based searches are likely to outpace plain vanilla Google searches by 2028. MyMuse is seeing a 10% increase in its monthly searches on ChatGPT since it started focusing on GEO. Siftly offers GEO services to B2B, B2C and D2C companies. Asva AI is another startup helping companies improve their presence on these models. Industry experts are of the view that LLMs are particularly well suited for specific user queries and private information-seeking behaviour.

    The Economic Times
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