
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


When you go to look something up on the internet, more often than not you’re Googling.
The search engine’s ubiquity has earned Google billions and billions of dollars, but now a US judge has ruled that Google became a monopoly illegally.
How you search the internet might change as a result, with the forced break-up of the firm one of the options on the table to ensure more competition in the market.
So, how did Google rise to the top and stay there?
Today, we dissect the biggest tech competition ruling in decades with Leah Nylen, Bloomberg’s anti-trust reporter.
Featured:
Leah Nylen, Bloomberg anti-trust reporter
By ABC Australia4.2
5858 ratings
When you go to look something up on the internet, more often than not you’re Googling.
The search engine’s ubiquity has earned Google billions and billions of dollars, but now a US judge has ruled that Google became a monopoly illegally.
How you search the internet might change as a result, with the forced break-up of the firm one of the options on the table to ensure more competition in the market.
So, how did Google rise to the top and stay there?
Today, we dissect the biggest tech competition ruling in decades with Leah Nylen, Bloomberg’s anti-trust reporter.
Featured:
Leah Nylen, Bloomberg anti-trust reporter

99 Listeners

92 Listeners

55 Listeners

14 Listeners

10 Listeners

4 Listeners

10 Listeners

17 Listeners

29 Listeners

90 Listeners

56 Listeners

66 Listeners

8 Listeners

18 Listeners

10 Listeners

11 Listeners

346 Listeners

9 Listeners

9 Listeners

82 Listeners

122 Listeners

167 Listeners

235 Listeners

45 Listeners

4 Listeners

72 Listeners

2 Listeners

7 Listeners