In June, Canada's Supreme Court came down on Google—hard. It ruled that the tech giant must take down certain Google search results for pirated products. And not just in Canada, but globally. Now, ...
A U.S. judge on Monday ruled that Google’s ubiquitous search engine has been illegally exploiting its dominance to squash competition and stifle innovation in a seismic decision that could shake up ...
6:34 Looking at the evolution and future of A.I. Google on Tuesday rolled out a retooled search engine that will frequently favor responses crafted by artificial intelligence over website links, a ...
Canada's Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld a ruling ordering Google to de-index a company globally, sparking concerns among freedom of speech advocates about the ruling's implications. The case, ...
In a case involving pirated goods, the country's top court says removing results only on Google's Canada site isn't enough. But critics worry about free speech. Ed is a many-year veteran of the ...
Web giant ordered to remove search links to certain pirate sites around the globe. By Eriq Gardner Former Legal Editor-at-Large Google has suffered what could be its worst legal defeat since Europe’s ...
Europe can censor European search engines. But can a Canadian court censor every single search engine across the globe, controlling what information people in other countries have access to? That’s ...
Google.com will soon be the only way to access Google Search. The ccTLD versions of Google will redirect to Google.com. That means if you try to go to Google.ca, Google.fr. Google.co.uk and so on, ...
Google cofounder Larry Page had a vision for search engines 25 years ago that sounds eerily close to what its AI product Gemini is making possible today.
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