Nadella testifies at Google antitrust trial
Submitted 1 year ago by reddig33@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world
Comments
Blizzard@lemmy.zip 1 year ago
Dariusmiles2123@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
It’s interesting to read about these 2 giant companies facing each other.
autotldr@lemmings.world [bot] 1 year ago
This is the best summary I could come up with:
But over hours of contentious testimony from Nadella during the landmark US v. Google antitrust trial, the reason for that inferiority became the question of the day.
Nadella, in a dark blue suit, took the stand early Monday morning after a few minutes of scheduling updates and a delay long enough that Judge Amit Mehta asked jokingly, “Mr.
(Google’s lead counsel, John Schmidtlein, later joked that he wished his law firm could count “marginally profitable” in the billions of dollars, as Nadella did with Bing.
Nadella even said he was willing to hide the Bing brand in Apple users’ search engines and respect any of the company’s privacy wishes, so urgent was his need to get more data at any cost.
(Nadella, as he did so often during the cross-examination, nodded and said “correct” and “that sounds right.”) In every case, Schmidtlein argued, Google simply out-invested and out-executed Microsoft.
(The witness after Nadella is former Neeva CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy, who has also said his search engine was crushed in part because overcoming Google’s default status was so difficult.)
The original article contains 1,556 words, the summary contains 178 words. Saved 89%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
reddig33@lemmy.world 1 year ago
“Defaults are the only thing that matter,” he said, “in terms of changing user behavior.” He called the idea that it’s easy to switch “bogus.”
Leta see if the feds remember that quote in the next Microsoft antitrust hearing.
flumph@programming.dev 1 year ago
Doesn’t the fact that every Windows PC ships with Edge and yet Chrome has 70% market share on desktop make a case against the idea that “defaults are everything”?
ripcord@kbin.social 1 year ago
PCs had been shipping with Chrome as the default for years due to agreements with OEMs.
ALSO, things did get bad enough for a few years that the general public did at least partly realize the IE sucked and that was part of the initial migration.
But now Edge is aggressively placed and it is becoming more prevalent despite the general public knowing zero advantages to it over Chrome.