Computer & Communication Industry Association
PublishedMarch 6, 2025

CCIA Statement as DOJ, Google Submit Final Remedies Recommendations in Google Search Case

Washington – The Department of Justice and Google will submit their final requests to a federal judge on what remedies he should approve in response to his finding that Google illegally maintained its search monopoly.

Last year U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta found Google’s agreements to pay other companies for prominent placement of its search service are exclusionary and anticompetitive. The DOJ and Google met this week according to news reports to discuss various remedies. In previous proposals, the DOJ has suggested various remedies that could go as far as breaking up a number of Google’s services, going far beyond the scope of Judge Mehta’s ruling.

The Computer & Communications Industry Association has advocated for competition in the tech industry for more than 50 years, having aligned with the DOJ in past cases, including the IBM, AT&T and Microsoft matters.

The following can be attributed to CCIA President Matt Schruers:

“It is concerning that Google could be penalized for engaging in the same business practices used by brands to prominently display their products on the end of a grocery aisle. At a time when U.S. digital services are in a fierce global competition for technology leadership, structural remedies that weaken US companies are not wise and risk handing an economic advantage to adversaries abroad.”

News

CCIA to Testify Against Hawaii Tech Bills Raising Free Speech, Privacy, and Innovation Concerns

Washington – The Computer & Communications Industry Association will testify today before the Hawaii House Economic Development & Technology Committee and Senate Labor and Technology Committ...
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CCIA Asks Court  to Continue Blocking Texas’ Unconstitutional App Store Law

Washington - The Computer & Communications Industry Association filed its opposition to Texas’ motion to allow SB2420, the App Store Accountability Act, to take effect while its appeal is heard ...
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New Report Identifies Major Barriers to Launching a Robust Space Economy

Washington –  A new report by the Computer & Communications Industry Association’s Space and Spectrum Policy Center outlines how reforms to our outdated space launch policy could propel the c...
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CCIA Challenges Unconstitutional App Store Law in Utah

Washington - The Computer & Communications Industry Association has sued the state of Utah in federal court to block SB142, the App Store Accountability Act, as a violation of the First Amendment...
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