Antitrust Antitrust

Google, DOJ grilled by US judge over payments to Apple for search engine defaults, foreclosure, consumer harm theories

Google was today asked to explain why it paid billions of dollars to make its search engine a default on Apple devices by a US federal judge who directed equally sharp and persistent questions to government plaintiffs and sought an explanation over allegations that the tech giant foreclosed the general search

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Khushita Vasant

Chief Antitrust Correspondent, US


Khushita covers US antitrust enforcement and litigation for MLex. A former Brussels hand, she wrote about about antitrust & mergers for the Policy and Regulatory Report (PaRR), she has covered the EU's actions against Google, Apple, Facebook and Amazon to name a few. Khushita specialises in tech and patent policy coverage which featured in the Concurrences Antitrust Writing Awards. Previously as a financial journalist for The Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires, she wrote about monetary policy and the bond and currency markets. Khushita studied journalism at Mumbai University, and received an Erasmus Mundus scholarship for a masters from universities in Germany and Austria.

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