Whether Google is a monopoly isn't the point


Source: GigaOm
Author: Mathew Ingram
Location:
Senate Judiciary Committee, Constitution Avenue and 1st Street, NE Dirksen Senate Office Building -- 226, Washington, DC, 20002, United States

Much has been made of Google chairman Eric Schmidt’s admission that the web giant might be a monopoly, during his testimony before a Senate Judiciary Subcommittee. But despite the howls of outrage at Google’s size and dominance in the search market, the fact remains that — for the purposes of U.S. antitrust law at least — being a monopoly isn't illegal.

What is illegal is either acquiring that monopoly by nefarious or anticompetitive means, or using that dominant position in a way that harms the market for those services. The problem with applying that to Google is that even if you assume it has a monopoly and is being anticompetitive, it’s not at all clear how that is bad for consumers.

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