Google CEO Sundar Pichai is set to testify Wednesday morning in a landmark antitrust trial in Washington, where U.S. regulators are pushing for drastic measures—including forcing the company to divest its Chrome browser—to promote fairer competition in online search.
Pichai will defend Google’s parent company, Alphabet, against the U.S. Department of Justice’s proposals, which Google argues would unintentionally harm browser developers, smartphone manufacturers, and everyday internet users.
The trial’s outcome could significantly reshape the digital landscape by challenging Google’s longstanding dominance as the primary gateway to online information.
The DOJ, along with a coalition of state attorneys general, is seeking remedies to reinvigorate competition in the search market, especially as it converges with emerging generative AI tools like ChatGPT. Prosecutors warn that Google’s current dominance could spill over into AI-powered search.
U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta previously ruled that Google, which powers the majority of U.S. online searches, “has no true competitor.” He noted that the tech giant maintains its monopoly in part by paying billions to companies such as Apple, Samsung, AT&T, and Verizon to make Google the default search engine on new devices.
The DOJ is asking the court to block these payments and to require Google to share its search data with competitors.
Google contends that such actions would unfairly give away proprietary technology, compromise user privacy, and harm smaller firms like Mozilla, which depend on Google’s revenue support for survival.
Evidence presented at trial shows Google has recently eased its contracts to permit device makers and carriers to pre-install rival search and AI applications. The company has stated it will appeal if the final ruling goes against it.