Will Trump stop the Chrome sale?
It's possible that President-elect Donald Trump may intervene to stop the Chrome sale, as he signaled on the campaign trail that there could be "more fair" ways to end Google's monopoly without breaking up its business.
Did it? Or was it because they paid to be the default on everything?
Ughhhhh.We have a very real risk where web standards get dictated by Chrome and everything becomes Chrome-specific to the point where other browsers don't work with most websites. Just like what Microsoft did with IE in the 90s.
During a college class, I got interested in how IE handled pop-ups. Turned out to be sufficiently bad enough to turn quitting IE into a forkbomb.Ughhhhh.
For readers who weren't of age in the 90's: I can confirm that IE truly sucked.
Developers essentially had to create two websites, with all sorts of IE-accommodating kludges. Nightmare.
And who trains those models?I wonder if the future of search will shift away from corporate models in the future.
Jeff Geerling recently put up a video of a locally-running LLM instance running on a Pi 5.
I can envision a future where locally-running personal LLMs are quietly surfing the net for you, learning more about your niche interests for you while also training themselves. And those LLMs becoming federated with other personal LLMs to leverage their niche data. And federated with local library & university LLMs for their broader information.
They are going to get this done in (checks calendar) the next 60 days?
Ughhhhh.
For readers who weren't of age in the 90's: I can confirm that IE truly sucked.
Developers essentially had to create two websites, with all sorts of IE-accommodating kludges. Nightmare.
Then why is Google paying so much to be the default?Why is it a "problem"
It absolutely is the responsibility of government to stop anti-competitive behavior, like Google purchasing their way as the default.It isn't the responsibility of the government to override consumers acting in what they see as their own best interest, just because most consumers come to the same conclusion.
Then they can continue to use it. But that's not what they're expressing. They're expressing a desire that anti competitive behavior continue.I'm not agreeing with them, but what if they just have an opinion about what product is the best?
You know what's being discussed. You're deliberately being obtuse in an act of bad faith.Data collection everywhere? that would be really hard to define where everywhere is.
There's literally a story on the front page about them also going after Microsoft.Please hit Microsoft too.
Heh.Microsoft.
They use Chrome under Edge anyway. And they love love love to have their own browser platform.
Wouldn't that put the DoJ's panties in a twist?
Or force the lazy option and just spin it off to the shareholders, though then that risks them doing a bad sale of the spinoff after the factHeh.
I suppose there could be an auction and DOJ doesn't care what that price is.
It seems wrong that you would need root privileges to change your browser settings. Why wouldn’t that be an ordinary user-level setting?Found the guy who’s never had a work computer without root privileges
But imagine if someone else had been the default on Mobile Safari. Do you not think that would eat into Google's coffers and marketshare a bit?I would assume, possibly erroneously, that they didn't start out with an endless supply of cash to push that advantage and to get there they had to provide significant value to someone, somewhere in the past.
And the rest of humanity's boon. Google's hypothetical perspective on this is the last thing anyone should care about. Let's hope DoJ can get something effective done before the Anus puts a stop to it and turns the entire federal government back into the predator parasite class' whorehouse.Welcome to Google’s nightmare…
It seems wrong that you would need root privileges to change your browser settings. Why wouldn’t that be an ordinary user-level setting?
Of course, I totally believe that some work environments have policy set by petty tyrants who ludicrously micro-manage regular user’s desktop settings out of some misguided ideas about security risks or support costs. And, of course, some users definitely exist who will manage to turn any freedom extended to them into a security incident or support call….
Maybe Pichai will get the boot, finally. he's run google's reputation through the mud with consumers but investors like money so he kept his job.
on another note, my prediction is Musk/X buys chrome.
And who trains those models?
There literally isn't. I see stories about full screen ads, quantum error correction, Flight Sim, and Windows 365 Link. And a couple pages later something about the FTC, not the DoJ.There's literally a story on the front page about them also going after Microsoft.
I don't know why you're getting downvoted. I switched to Kagi and it's awesome.Quick plug for Kagi:
https://kagi.com/
It's an alternative search engine, uses a machine x of results from its own database plus google and bing. You can block sites from appearing in results, and the results are much better than googles right now.
It is a subscription service, but you get free searches each month if you don't pay.
And that's how you get ExxonMobil/Chevron or the current AT&TSpinning of Android or Chrome is not really solving the monopoly and abuse of it. If the DOJ was serious about making any inroads, they would have split google in 3-4 mini-googles. All getting the same technologies to start with and then let these new companies compete with each other with an explicit rule they are not allowed to buy each other for 10 years.
Because for most people, it’s a service that they have gotten used to being there for them to use free of direct monetary charge. Most people probably don’t give the inner workings of FAANG a second thought.WHY do you people keep siding with the monopoly jesus fuck!
Ars explicitly offers you that option - to subscribe and avoid ads. Yet as much as you apparently want to buy internet services instead of having ads, you don’t take that option.The pain will continue until the ad supported model of 'free' Internet is banned. Companies should produce and sell products and services instead of creating skinner boxes to mine consumers for value to sell to other companies. Over 20 years since the dot com bust and we're still dealing with the side effects of the fake 'free' Internet.
Monetize it by doing search deals same way mozilla do I would assume, if Google pay Apple $20B a year for search and Safari is roughly half the market share of Chrome (in the US, Safari's best market) thats a huge asset.And who exactly do you think is going to buy and maintain Chrome? How are they going to monetize it?
Very well put. Most of the "I hate ads" folks actually don't hate them enough to pay for a paid alternative. humans are emotional monkeys at the end of the day and say all sorts of stuff in an anonymous forum but when it comes to action you can filter out the noiseArs explicitly offers you that option - to subscribe and avoid ads. Yet as much as you apparently want to buy internet services instead of having ads, you don’t take that option.
Ads are not new to the internet - “free” radio and television have had them from the start. Most periodicals (newspapers and magazines) have always had them, in addition to subscription fees, because few subscribers would be willing to pay subscription fees high enough to actually support things. (When newspaper advertising tanked because of the web, the local newspaper subscription prices skyrocketed, massively reducing subscription levels, and many newspapers and magazines have folded due to this.)
The ad supported (or supplemented) model is what makes the availability of internet info and services sites possible for most users - they couldn’t afford to subscribe to all the sites they’d want to make use of, which would end up killing most sites. (The streaming video marketplace is facing this issue now.)
The harvesting of user data in support of targeted advertising (and other consumers of that data) is obviously a problem. The claim is that without targeting, the ads wouldn’t bring in enough to support the services, or would have to be so voluminous as to overwhelm the “useful” parts of a site. I don’t know if that’s true, but I’m pretty sure that without advertising of some sort, the web as we know it would be much smaller and less valuable than it currently is.
There is no reason to split up a company that's done the right things.People use google and chrome because its actually good. Why split up a company thats done things right? Its not like there is no alternatives to google, or the alternatives are better but google has suppressed them.
They can make Google sell it (not that it’s obvious there’d be a buyer unless a clear path to monetization could be found). But I don’t think they could force Google to just give it away - that would seem to be equivalent to a government seizure without compensation, which would violate the 5th amendment. (Note: IANAL - while this is a civil rather than criminal case and decision, such a forfeiture might be a legitimate penalty.)Make it a nonprofit spinoff like Mozilla that companies can contribute to for tax write-offs and for when they need a browser engine with feature X that they want to contribute
The problem, ironically, is that Google is such a powerhouse in the ad space that you have to play by their rules. Sound familiar?The harvesting of user data in support of targeted advertising (and other consumers of that data) is obviously a problem. The claim is that without targeting, the ads wouldn’t bring in enough to support the services, or would have to be so voluminous as to overwhelm the “useful” parts of a site. I don’t know if that’s true, but I’m pretty sure that without advertising of some sort, the web as we know it would be much smaller and less valuable than it currently is.
Except those deals are part of what got Google in trouble in this case, and their only major search competitor is Microsoft Bing, who are monopolists in their own right and may not be inclined to paint a fresh target on themselves. Plus if Google's banned from bidding, MS doesn't need to offer nearly as much, since there's nobody else with deep pockets to drive up the bid.Monetize it by doing search deals same way mozilla do I would assume, if Google pay Apple $20B a year for search and Safari is roughly half the market share of Chrome (in the US, Safari's best market) thats a huge asset.
Google has better indexing than anybody else, but indexing isn’t the search tool itself, it’s the data input. If we’re just talking UI and features then Kagi is far superior to Google Search.None, because ... Google is a monopoly.
If internet ads weren't a monopoly (outside of running your own), then competitive forces would mean that websites running ads would select the advertisers with the best returns for them. Usually that would mean the ones that give them the largest share of the ad prices.Ars explicitly offers you that option - to subscribe and avoid ads. Yet as much as you apparently want to buy internet services instead of having ads, you don’t take that option.
Ads are not new to the internet - “free” radio and television have had them from the start. Most periodicals (newspapers and magazines) have always had them, in addition to subscription fees, because few subscribers would be willing to pay subscription fees high enough to actually support things. (When newspaper advertising tanked because of the web, the local newspaper subscription prices skyrocketed, massively reducing subscription levels, and many newspapers and magazines have folded due to this.)
The ad supported (or supplemented) model is what makes the availability of internet info and services sites possible for most users - they couldn’t afford to subscribe to all the sites they’d want to make use of, which would end up killing most sites. (The streaming video marketplace is facing this issue now.)
The harvesting of user data in support of targeted advertising (and other consumers of that data) is obviously a problem. The claim is that without targeting, the ads wouldn’t bring in enough to support the services, or would have to be so voluminous as to overwhelm the “useful” parts of a site. I don’t know if that’s true, but I’m pretty sure that without advertising of some sort, the web as we know it would be much smaller and less valuable than it currently is.