KEY POINTS
  • The biggest tech monopoly trial since the Department of Justice challenged Microsoft more than 20 years ago is set to begin on Tuesday.
  • At stake in this trial is the chance for the DOJ to prove it can bring a successful anti-monopoly case in the modern digital age, and for Google to preserve a long-standing business practice for its search products.
  • Here's how to expect the monthslong trial to play out and the key points of argument in the case.

In this article

Google CEO, Sundar Pichai (: and Jonathan Kanter, assistant attorney general of antitrust for the US Department of Justice (R).

The biggest tech monopoly trial since the Department of Justice challenged Microsoft more than 20 years ago is set to begin Tuesday, kicking off a new chapter of anti-monopoly enforcement in the U.S.

Over the next few months, the DOJ and a collection of state attorneys general will make their case to a D.C. District Court judge for why Google has allegedly violated anti-monopoly law through exclusive agreements with mobile phone manufacturers and browser makers to make its search engine the default for consumers. Google, in turn, will seek to tell the judge why its behavior is not anti-competitive and instead provides a better experience for consumers.

In this article