Yelp files an antitrust lawsuit against Google.

cpvr

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Yelp has filed an antitrust lawsuit against Google in federal court in San Francisco, alleging that the tech giant is using its dominant position in general search to stifle competition and maintain control over the local search and local search advertising markets. According to Yelp, Google has strayed from its mission of providing the best information to users, instead leveraging its monopoly power to favor its own services at the expense of rivals, thereby degrading the quality of search results and limiting consumer choice.

For years, Yelp has advocated for a more consumer-friendly local search experience and fair competition among vertical search services. This legal action aims to preserve competitive markets, protect consumer choices, seek damages, and prevent Google from continuing its anticompetitive practices, thereby fostering an environment where innovation can thrive.

Google’s long-standing dominance in general search—where it controls about 90% of the market—has allowed it to exert significant influence over related markets, including local search and local search advertising. This monopoly, which Google has allegedly maintained through exclusive multi-billion dollar deals with browser developers, device manufacturers, and cellular carriers, dictates what and how consumers view search results.

On desktop, around 9 billion daily Google searches are conducted, with nearly a third of those having local intent; on mobile devices, this figure increases to nearly half. When users search with local intent, Google allegedly manipulates its search results to promote its own local services over those of competitors, ignoring its own quality ranking system. Instead of competing fairly with companies like Yelp, Google’s self-preferencing practices result in an increasing number of searches that lead to zero clicks, keeping users within Google’s ecosystem. Even when users do click, 30% of the time, it leads to another Google property. Yelp argues that this behavior allows Google to siphon traffic and advertising revenue from superior vertical search services, ultimately harming consumers and competition alike.

Source: https://blog.yelp.com/news/yelp-v-google/
 
Playing devil's advocate for a minute, Yelp, which I've never used once, is a search engine? Do their own search results manipulate data to promote preferred services? I'd guess they probably do.

While I'm not a fan of individual companies/cartels controling any market, complaining because nobody wants to use your stuff seems a little, I don't know, churlish? Perhaps I'm reading it wrong but this seems to me to be a rather unwarranted action.
 
Good! And I hope more companies will follow suit so that Google's monopoly can be dismantled, piece by piece.

complaining because nobody wants to use your stuff seems a little, I don't know, churlish?

That's not what this is about. The problem is that nobody will find Yelp because, as the company argues, Google is actively creating and preserving a monopoly when it comes to "local searches" by preferencing its own "inferior" results over competitors.
 
They are SO big that going to take so many people and more lawyers to take action. THey are already taken over people, AI is getting worse as we speak
 
They are SO big that going to take so many people and more lawyers to take action. THey are already taken over people, AI is getting worse as we speak
It’s not Google’s fault that they made a superior product that is unmatched in search engines.

Microsoft has been trying to compete with them for years with Bing.
Like Yahoo did back in the day. What happened with Yahoo search? Bing now powers Yahoo search.

Facebook can easily launch a search engine if they wanted to, then nobody would be calling Google a monopoly over search.

Also, this will probably end up just like Microsoft being called a monopoly years ago. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Microsoft_Corp.

Will the government actually break up Google? i highly doubt it.
 
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