Post-debate Google News search results for Vance were 100% left-leaning: Study
With Election Day just about a month away, voters researching candidates through Google News searches may be getting information from sources with a left-leaning bias. According to a study by the conservative media watchdog Media Research Center (MRC), Google, the largest search engine in the world, is prioritizing results from left-leaning news outlets.
Following the recent vice presidential debate, MRC found that headlines populating Google News under certain keywords were exclusively from left-leaning outlets. Specifically, a search for “J.D. Vance” on debate night revealed that every article, 100%, came from outlets with a Left political bias, including major organizations like The New York Times, BBC, CNN and CBS News.
A subsequent search for “Tim Walz” yielded only slightly better results, with 90% of articles from left-leaning outlets, and just one article from Fox News Digital.
This marks MRC’s 21st election-related study, all demonstrating similar patterns of bias. For instance, a study conducted the day before the debate found that searches for “Kamala Harris presidential race 2024” returned only left-leaning news until the 13th page of results, where a Fox News article appeared.
Similarly, a search for “Donald Trump presidential campaign websites” did not show a right-leaning result until the 14th page, where a New York Post article was listed.
Former President Trump took to Truth Social last week to express grievances about alleged biases in Google’s news search results, claiming the platform has “illegally used a system of only revealing bad stories about Trump” while promoting positive stories about Harris. He called this a “blatant interference of elections.”
In response, Google issued a statement to The New York Times, asserting that “both campaign websites consistently appear at the top of search for relevant and common search queries.”
The company refuted MRC’s findings, telling CNBC, “Queries about the presidential election or candidates generally surface links to constantly changing news articles reflecting what’s on the web — so they change all the time. We absolutely do not manipulate search results to favor any candidate.”
Apple and Google lose billions in back taxes, EU fines across the pond
The European Commission scored two big wins against major U.S. tech companies on Tuesday, Sept. 10. Both Apple and Google will have to pay billions of euros after nearly a decade of fighting in EU courts.
Apple lost its final appeal to avoid paying $14.34 billion in back taxes to Ireland. The European Court of Justice ruled the iPhone-maker received too sweet of a deal to make Ireland its European headquarters.
The ruling stems from a practice known as a “Double Irish” scheme.
For U.S. companies that operate in multiple countries, it was a way for them to shield non-U.S. profits from U.S. corporate tax. But they didn’t pay much in Ireland either; the money would get funneled from Ireland to a tax haven.
The tax loophole was used by Ireland to attract major tech companies to its shores for European headquarters. After pressure from the EU and U.S., Ireland was forced to close the loophole in 2014. However, existing companies like Apple were grandfathered in and could take advantage of the law until 2020.
In 2016, the European Commission ruled Ireland provided illegal state aid to Apple by not collecting 13 billion euros in taxes from 2004 to 2014.
“No one did anything wrong here and we need to stand together,” Apple CEO Tim Cook told the Irish Independent back in 2016. “Ireland is being picked on and this is unacceptable.”
Cook also called claims made by European Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager that the company only paid 0.005% in taxes “total political crap.” He said the company paid $400 million in taxes in 2014, making Apple the highest taxpayer in Ireland that year.
Eight years later, Vestager said winning the final appeal against Apple made her cry.
“Today marks a step forward and it’s encouraging,” Vestager said Tuesday. “It’s encouraging for us to do more. The commission will continue its work on harmful tax competition and aggressive tax planning, both in terms of legislative proposals but also enforcement.”
Other major multinational companies, like Amazon and Starbucks, have avoided paying back taxes, unlike Apple. But the commission’s case against Ireland and Apple proved stronger after getting documents where Irish officials were upfront about just how good of a deal they gave Apple.
The Luxembourg-based court also upheld a $2.7 billion antitrust fine against Google on the same day, giving the commission its second victory in 24 hours.
The Google fine has been in limbo since it was levied back in 2017. At the time, the commission accused Google of giving prominent placement to its own comparison shopping service and burying its rivals in the same results. Google had a 90% market share for search in the EU when the case first started.
“The Google shopping case is a landmark in the history of regulatory actions against Big Tech companies,” Vestager said. “It was one of the first significant antitrust cases brought by a competition agency against a major digital company. And I think this case marked a pivotal shift in how digital companies were regulated and also perceived.”
“In essence, the Google shopping case was a catalyst for change, inspiring a more vigilant and proactive approach to regulating Big Tech and of course, ensuring also a fairer digital marketplace,” she added.
Google is a frequent target of the competition committee and has been fined more than 8 billion euros in the last 10 years. Google is still waiting for final rulings on challenges to cases involving the Android operating system for mobile phones and its advertising platform.
Google also has antitrust concerns to deal with in the U.S. In a trial that started Monday, Sept. 9, over its advertising practices, the Department of Justice argued, “Google has used anticompetitive, exclusionary, and unlawful means to eliminate or severely diminish any threat to its dominance over digital advertising technologies.”
Is Google just better? Company defends advertising tech after losing search case
Court is back in session and Google is back on the defense. A month after a federal judge ruled Google is a monopoly because of its search engine, the Big Tech firm is defending its advertising practices. The cases could multiply calls to break up Google.
In a new antitrust trial starting Monday, Sept. 9, the Department of Justice will argue that “Google has used anticompetitive, exclusionary, and unlawful means to eliminate or severely diminish any threat to its dominance over digital advertising technologies.”
Essentially, the government is arguing Google has an unlawful monopoly as the leading buyer and seller of digital ads.
The case centers around Google Ad Manager, which websites use to sell advertising space on their sites. The tech comes from Google’s $3.1 billion acquisition of DoubleClick in 2008.
“DoubleClick, which was founded in 1996, provides display ads on Web sites like MySpace, The Wall Street Journal and America Online as well as software to help those sites maximize ad revenue.”
While MySpace and AOL are irrelevant today, the DoubleClick acquisition helped make Google a display ad powerhouse in a space that was just getting started. Back then, the Federal Trade Commissionapproved the DoubleClick acquisition, saying it was unlikely to substantially lessen competition. The European Commission also approved the deal.
Today, the government is trying to walk back that approval. Google is now more than 10 times the size it was when it bought DoubleClick. Additionally, ad business generated more than $30 billion in revenue in 2021, according to the government.
“In court, we will show that ad buyers and sellers have many options, and when they choose Google they do so because our ad tech is simple, affordable, and effective,” Google’s vice president of Regulatory Affairs wrote in a blog post Sunday, Sept. 8. “In short – it works.”
It is similar to the argument Google made defending its search engine practice; that its product is just better than the competition. And while Google lost that case, it’s appealing it.
When the search ruling came down, Straight Arrow News asked antitrust expert and former FTC Chair Bill Kovacic about the merits of Google’s argument.
“In making that argument, they are appealing directly to a policy position that has appeared in a number of earlier decisions; that you can’t take a successful enterprise and punish it for offering a better product,” Kovacic said. “So through the trial and certainly through the appeals, they will say, we may not be the perfect company, but there’s no way to explain our position except for our ability to provide our users a better and better experience, and certainly superior to anyone else’s.”
“That’s a very important argument,” Kovacic continued. “But there are still limits on the steps they can take to reinforce the preeminence. But their overriding theme is going to be, ‘We are successful because we have a good product, and not because we use improper business tactics, the very proper tactic we use is offering users a better experience.’”
The advertising trial will not be as financially consequential as the search case: search is more than half of Google’s annual revenue. On Friday, Sept. 6, federal judge Amit Mehta, who ruled Google is a search monopoly, said he’d decide on a remedy by next August.
House GOP probes Meta, Google over Trump assassination attempt ‘censorship’
In the wake of the assassination attempt against former President Donald Trump, some strange and inaccurate things happened on the internet. Meta’s AI chatbot said the assassination attempt was a fictional event, Facebook fact-checked and censored the iconic image of Trump raising his fist, and Google’s autofill search feature produced results for the failed assassination attempts on Harry Truman and Ronald Reagan, or the historic assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, but not Trump.
The companies admitted to the shortcomings and provided clear explanations. However, the House Oversight Committee wants to know more, and it’s opening an investigation into how these products are designed.
“On behalf of the American people, the Committee is dedicated to fully understanding when and how information is being suppressed or modified, whether it be due to technical error, a policy intended to ensure safety, or a specific intent to mislead,” Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., said in a statement.
Comer is asking Meta and Google for all internal policies and documents related to how their AI chatbot and search products are designed, trained, reviewed, managed and updated.
The committee want to know how these products take digest recent newsworthy events and how they preclude or limit information the companies view as harmful or dangerous.
Here’s what prompted the investigation.
Immediately after the assassination attempt, Meta’s AI chatbot told users it was a fictitious event. Meta’s vice president of U.S. Global Policy, Joel Kaplan, explained in a blog post what happened.
“Rather than have Meta AI give incorrect information about the attempted assassination, we programmed it to simply not answer questions about it after it happened and instead give a generic response about how it couldn’t provide any information,” Kaplan wrote.
“In a small number of cases, Meta AI continued to provide incorrect answers, including sometimes asserting that the event didn’t happen,” he added. “These types of responses are referred to as hallucinations, which is an industry-wide issue we see across all generative AI systems, and is an ongoing challenge for how AI handles real-time events going forward.”
Facebook also censored and fact-checked the picture of Trump holding up his fist because a user posted a doctored image of Secret Service agents smiling as they surrounded him. A fact-check label was added to the fake image which caused the technology to scan the site for all posts that contained it. Because the real image is nearly identical, the system added the fact-check to it.
Finally Google’s autofill didn’t complete searches for the assassination attempt, instead it provided information on other presidents or Archduke Franz Ferdinand.
According to the committee staff inquiries, “Google contends that the autocomplete results omitted the Trump assassination attempt due to a safety protocol concerning predicted assassination attempts of current political leaders, and Google had not yet updated the autocomplete feature to reflect that an assassination attempt of President Trump had occurred.”
Google’s antitrust loss ‘a warning’ to Big Tech: The government can win
Pressure is building on Big Tech after a federal court ruled Google is a monopoly. Google isn’t the only one the government is going after. Apple, Meta and Amazon are actively fighting lawsuits.
While Google’s appeal plays out, tech firms will be eyeing the courts, Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice for clues to a shift in the regulatory landscape.
For how Google’s ruling might impact current and future antitrust cases, Straight Arrow News interviewed former FTC chair and commissioner Bill Kovacic.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity. Watch the interview in the video above.
Simone Del Rosario: Does this serve as a flashing red light for other Big Tech firms?
Bill Kovacic: It does indeed. They’ve seen the light flashing yellow for several years because, not only in the United States but around the world, we find competition authorities and individual jurisdictions beginning new investigations, initiating cases, and in the case of the European Union adopting new regulatory frameworks, theirs called the Digital Markets Act.
The Big Tech sector has seen gathering storm clouds now for a number of years, going back to, I’d say, the middle of the previous decade. But we’re now seeing the delivery of policy measures that foreshadowed evermore significant forms of intervention. And this is an indication, not only that the government can win, it can marshal the resources to do this kind of work well, it can bring the cases to a successful conclusion at the trial.
It’s a warning that the government can prevail. The government can make well-founded arguments.
Bill Kovacic, former FTC chair and commissioner
But also it means that there will be more to come and there are other significant matters in the pipeline: another Department of Justice case involving Google involving ad serving; a case by the FTC challenging Meta for its acquisition of Instagram 10 years ago; an FTC case against Amazon; a Department of Justice case against Apple; state government cases attacking a number of these large enterprises.
I think for the business community, especially for the tech community, it’s an indication of things to come and that the successful defense of their position is not going to be something they can take for granted.
Simone Del Rosario: How does [the Google ruling] measure up to the Amazon situation where they’re being accused of having self-preference for their own products?
Bill Kovacic: This involves, I think in some ways, a harder case for the Federal Trade Commission. The FTC is arguing that you’ve given your own products, your own services, a better display compared to others, that you’re favoring them. I think the FTC is going to have a somewhat harder time dealing with the argument [of], ‘I’m a successful firm, don’t I have the freedom to offer consumers not only the better product, but to put my product first? To say, look at my product. Why should I have to display the products of my rivals in a better light?’
Amazon would not have unlimited freedom to make certain choices that are going to be the subject of the case. But Amazon’s arguments are arguably more within the framework of Supreme Court jurisprudence that has been encouraging of the ability of dominant firms to decide who they’ll deal with and how they’ll deal. And a concern on the part of judges that they shouldn’t be involved in making technical decisions about how companies operate, determining who they can deal with, the terms on which they can deal with other parties. So I think the FTC in some ways faces a somewhat harder challenge in the light of this existing jurisprudence.
But from Amazon’s point of view, watching the outcome in this first important [Google] case, it’s a warning that the government can prevail. The government can make well-founded arguments. They can present them capably. They’re probably going to be found to be a dominant enterprise and the real question will be, is this self-preferencing behavior acceptable?
I think what all leading firms learn from the experience we’ve just observed is you can take absolutely nothing for granted in this process. And it’s an environment in which judges might well be persuaded that you made an incorrect judgment about where the line of illegality is and you stepped over it. At a very basic level, this is an important caution that says you can lose these cases if you’re a defendant.
Simone Del Rosario: I’m curious what your take is on the types of cases against Big Tech that current FTC Chair Lina Khan has been taking. What do you make of her strategy when it comes to going after Big Tech?
Bill Kovacic: She has put in motion one significant case on her own watch: that’s the Amazon case we mentioned before. The other major case that she has she inherited from the Trump administration. That’s the challenge to Meta for its acquisition of Instagram.
But the Amazon case is a very ambitious case. It is trying to define a new conception of what dominant firms can do, especially dominant firms that act as the owners of a platform on which products are sold, but their own products and the products of other parties operate on the same platform; to identify what a dominant firm can do by way of featuring its own products and perhaps treating the products of third parties on its platform, its competitors, differently.
That would be a significant development in the jurisprudence. I guess to put it in a very general way, it is a riskier case than the case that the DOJ is running against Google, the case that’s running against Apple, the other case that’s running against Google. And this is consistent, I think, with the chair’s philosophy, that a major role of the FTC should be to take on cases that involve more ambiguity, to take on cases that aren’t squarely within a framework where liability has been routinely found, but to move the frontiers outward.
So there’s a greater risk appetite at work there. The DOJ cases are very ambitious as well, but I’d say a signature element of the chair’s own program is to be willing to push the frontiers and to accept the risk that there will be judicial resistance and to accept the risk that there’ll be judicial rejection.
But for the sake of provoking the conversation with the courts and bringing these issues to the courts on a repeated basis, there’s a willingness, not simply in the area of Big Tech, but in other areas of the commission’s jurisdiction, to try to move the frontiers of enforcement outward and to acknowledge and accept the risk that these are hard cases to win. And [she does] not expect to prevail every time, but the very fact of bringing the cases, continuing the conversation with the courts, will have real value.
Break up Google? How the search giant might be punished for antitrust ruling
The antitrust ruling against Google on Monday, Aug. 5, is groundbreaking. By declaring Google is a monopoly, it marked the biggest tech antitrust ruling since Microsoft in the ’90s.
It’s not that the government never takes up these cases; it’s that the government doesn’t often win. And to be fair, it hasn’t won yet. Google plans to appeal and the tech world is closely watching how this one shakes out.
For what punishments Google could face to how long this case will drag out, Straight Arrow News tapped the expertise of Bill Kovacic, a former FTC chair and commissioner.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity. Watch the interview in the video above.
Simone Del Rosario: What do you make of Google’s assertion that its product is just better?
Bill Kovacic: The language and the music of earlier decisions from the Supreme Court has been one that’s very solicitous of the successful firm that achieves prominence through superior performance. So in making that argument, they are appealing directly to a policy position that has appeared in a number of earlier decisions that you can’t take a successful enterprise and punish it for offering a better product.
Through the trial and certainly through the appeals, they will say, “We may not be the perfect company, but there’s no way to explain our position except for our ability to provide our users a better and better experience and certainly superior to anyone else’s.”
That’s a very important argument, but there are still limits on the steps they can take to reinforce the preeminence.
Simone Del Rosario: Let’s say that this judgment stands. What’s going to happen to Google? What are the likely punishments that Google will face?
Bill Kovacic: Judge Mehta, who is the trial judge in the Google case, decided to split the proceedings into two parts. The first part was going to be the trial on whether the law had been broken. That part has been concluded with his opinion that finds that yes, indeed, in some respects, the law was broken.
The second part was that if there was a finding of liability, we’re going to have a separate proceeding on remedies. He’s going to have a meeting with the parties in early September to schedule the hearing or hearings that will take place to address the remedy.
We’re a good two years away from a final answer with respect to liability and to remedies.
Bill Kovacic, former FTC Chair and Commissioner
We probably will see, I suppose, several days of testimony by experts who lay out their views about what the remedy should be. Should it simply be an injunction that tells Google not to engage in the same behavior? Should it mandate that the company take affirmative steps to correct the effects of the behavior that it’s engaged in so far? Will the court go further to say a restructuring of the company is important? That a divestiture of some kind, say, for example, divesting the Android franchise would be an appropriate solution.
The judge is going to have a significant proceeding on the remedy, I suspect, by the end of this calendar year. He will reach his decision about what that remedy should be. We’ll see the final opinion on remedy come out, again, by the end of 2024 with inevitable appeals to the U.S. Court of Appeals to the District of Columbia, which would be step one. That would take up most of 2025.
The Supreme Court is not obliged to review this case. It has complete discretion over its docket with respect to antitrust matters. My intuition is that this will be a compelling case for them to review. This will be a case that they want to review to come in on these basic questions about the application of the antitrust law to Big Tech, to dominant firms generally. So my own quiet wager is that the Supreme Court would take the case. That takes us through most of 2026.
So if all of these appeals come about, we’re a good two years away from a final answer with respect to liability and to remedies. And for a case that began in 2020, in the second half of 2020, I guess all of us can look at that and say, “Is that a sensible way to make decisions about such fundamental matters of economic policy and operation,” a case that lasts the better part of seven years? But that’s what we’re in for going ahead. That’s roughly the timeline that might unfold.
Simone Del Rosario: And just to clarify, the remedies can be prescribed before this appeal process goes through even if they can’t be enforced, is that correct?
Bill Kovacic: Correct. The appeal would take place after the decision on remedies so that the parties would be filing their appeals with respect to decisions about whether the law was broken and with respect to the judge’s decision about what the appropriate remedy will be. It’s proceeding on remedies next, then the parties can appeal any part of what’s taken place before.
Simone Del Rosario: And you mentioned some relatively low-level remedies, an injunction, fines. Would that be enough to stop this behavior that the courts found was monopolistic?
Bill Kovacic: This is a point of enormous and contentious debate. I would say if you go back to the beginning of the U.S. antitrust system, the remedy that generally has been seen to be, by many observers, the necessary remedy for illegal monopolization, is structural relief, simply put, a breakup. You force the company to make major divestitures.
That is the big visible solution that many observers look for. By contrast, the injunction that you referred to is seen as often being too timid a solution, too difficult to oversee and apply, too easily evaded by companies that will adapt immediately to any control on conduct that you put before them.
Part of what makes up the debate today is a more sympathetic view about these injunctions. And the more sympathetic view basically goes like this. One is that the injunction forces the company to change its decision-making process. It means that more matters are run by the lawyers first. And instead of the business people simply acting immediately and impulsively on ideas they have, it’s got to go through the legal department.
The legal department, being somewhat more inherently cautious as a matter of culture, applies the brakes a bit to this process so that there’s an internal decision-making process that means that the company is less aggressive in the way in which it operates.
A second consequence is that there’s an awareness on the part of other firms that they have a bit more room to maneuver. They take advantage of the hesitation and limits on the dominant firm to find crevices in the market in which they can enter to expand their operations over time.
Now one theory is that when the government settled its monopolization case against Microsoft, a case brought in the late ’90s and settled in the early 2000s – in parallel with a case that was settled by the European Union, also involving claims of illegal conduct against Microsoft – initially the conduct-related remedies were heavily criticized as being too weak.
A new reinterpretation of that is that those remedies actually gave breathing room for what were then nascent tech competitors named Google, for example, and that it opened the path for Google to prosper.
So I’d say there’s an important strand of modern commentary that says conduct remedies can be a lot more potent than you might think. They may take longer to unfold. They don’t have the big bang explosion of a giant fireworks display. They’re less visible in that respect. But then they can have a powerful impact on the way that the market operates.
I think that even the specialists in the field would say there’s a lot of uncertainty about what the best solution is. You make your best judgment. It’s partly an act of faith that you’ve got the right solution in place. But I’d say that there’s a somewhat more sympathetic view of conduct remedies emerging that might incline the judge to say, that would be enough.
A federal judge ruled Google is a monopoly. What happens now?
Google is a monopoly that illegally maintained its stranglehold on the search world, a federal judge ruled Monday, Aug. 5. It’s a major antitrust victory for the Justice Department against Big Tech, and could impact other antitrust lawsuits against Google, Apple, Amazon and Meta. Google said it plans to appeal the decision.
The suit narrowed in on Google’s practice of paying billions to the likes of Apple and Samsung to have Google automatically handle searches on those devices. The New York Times said Google paid Apple $18 billion to be the default search engine back in 2021.
Lawyers for the government said that influence stopped competitors from being able to develop a product that could compete with Google on its massive scale. They also claimed the monopoly allowed Google to raise prices for ads shown in search results beyond what would be commanded by the market.
In a statement, Google Global Affairs President Kent Walker wrote, “This decision recognizes that Google offers the best search engine, but concludes that we shouldn’t be allowed to make it easily available.”
“We plan to appeal,” Walker added. “As this process continues, we will remain focused on making products that people find helpful and easy to use.”
During the trial, Microsoft’s CEO claimed the “oligopolistic” relationship Google had with Apple could push Google to dominate the AI race if it wasn’t stopped. Microsoft’s Bing is the closest competitor to Google when it comes to search, but it is by a very wide margin.
Now the future of the search giant is in the hands of Judge Amit Mehta of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. In his ruling, Mehta wrote, “Google is a monopolist, and it has acted as one to maintain its monopoly.”
This ruling does not yet come with a remedy. Mehta will have to decide if the way to correct Google’s monopoly is to potentially change the way it operates or force it to sell off part of its business.