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The broad scope of recommended penalties underscores how severely officials believe Google should be punished following a ruling that branded the company as a monopolist.
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Microsoft Edge offers a number of options for better data protection, but these settings are difficult to find. We'll show you three easy ways to protect your data.
Further reading: 5 ways Microsoft Edge is better than Chrome
1. Prevent third-party cookies
Cookies are small text files that are copied to your PC from the websites you surf. First-party cookies can only be read by the website that set them. In online shops, for example, they are used to identify the customer's shopping basket. Third-party cookies, on the other hand, are usually placed by advertisers. They're used to recognize the user, which is why they're also called tracking cookies.
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Despite shared concerns about Google's power, critics of the company and former executives express little agreement on what, if anything, can really be done to increase competition.
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That's according to Bloomberg, which has been rock-solid on this case for years. Previously the DoJ was said to be considering some kind of breakup of Google's big three corporate assets: Search, Chrome, and Android. Some or all of them were on the table, but the DoJ has apparently settled on Chrome as the piece of the monopoly puzzle that has to go.
The federal team will also suggest that Google be forced to refrain from making the kind of exclusivity contracts that have become a staple of its OEM partnerships for Android and Chrome devices, according to the report. The DoJ also wants Google to give websites more tools to effectively opt-out of being used in the company's extensive data scraping for AI training.
Note that this doesn't mean it's a done deal. Assuming that Bloomberg is accurate, that means that DoJ attorneys will suggest Google be forced to divest itself of Chrome to District Judge Amit P. Mehta
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