google case
What Google's Antitrust Defeat Means for AI
Google has officially been named a monopoly. On Aug. 5, a federal judge charged the tech giant with illegally using its market power to harm rival search engines, marking the first antitrust defeat for a major internet platform in more than 20 years--and thereby calling into question the business practices of Silicon Valley's most powerful companies. Many experts have speculated the landmark decision will make judges more receptive to antitrust action in other ongoing cases against the Big Tech platforms, especially with regards to the burgeoning AI industry. Today, the AI ecosystem is dominated by many of the same companies that the government is challenging in court, and those companies are using the same tactics to entrench their power in AI markets. Judge Amit Mehta's ruling in the Google case centered on the massive sums of money the company paid firms like Apple and Samsung to make its search engine the default on their smartphones and browsers.
- Information Technology (1.00)
- Government (1.00)
- Law > Business Law > Antitrust Law (0.51)
Google case set to examine if EU data rules extend...
Google is fighting in Europe's top court today to tighten the scope of an EU privacy law that grants citizens the'right to be forgotten'. The rule allows people to demand Google remove search results that mention outdated or embarrassing information about them. This includes links to websites mentioning serious incidents - such as bankruptcy or criminal convictions - that may cause that person to be stigmatised. Google is battling with France's data privacy regulator over an order to extend the rule to remove search results worldwide upon request. The dispute pits data privacy concerns against the public's right to know, while also raising thorny questions about how to enforce differing legal jurisdictions when it comes to the borderless internet.
- Law (1.00)
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (1.00)
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (1.00)
- Information Technology > Information Management > Search (0.63)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Supervised Learning (0.40)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Inductive Learning (0.40)
Google case set to examine if EU data rules extend globally
Google employees reviewing the company appreciate the company's benefits and perks, which include free food and coffee made by baristas in every building. Other benefits include onsite gyms, free workout classes, and shuttles for free and easy commuting. Employees also appear confident in the company's leadership. Google CEO Sundar Pichai has a near-perfect 95% approval rating on Glassdoor. LONDON – Google is going to Europe's top court in its legal fight against an order requiring it to extend "right to be forgotten" rules to its search engines globally.
- Europe > France (0.07)
- North America > United States > California > Santa Clara County > Mountain View (0.06)
- Europe > Russia (0.06)
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- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (0.98)
- Law > Civil Rights & Constitutional Law (0.72)
Big Data and Machine Learning (Google case)
The database is like a library building ... every book (information) that enters must be properly placed (processed systematically), when a number of books come then the officer should be recorded like a book code, ISBN, publisher, author, book title, and others. If a bookcase is full then it must increase the amount, if one floor is full of bookcases then it should increase the number of floors, if one building is full of bookcases then it should increase the number of buildings. In this case, Google is the admin that will direct you to the right bookcase based on your search, because there are so many bookcases, and many floors, with different buildings. When you have the flu (cold sickness) and you are looking for a book on how to treat it, google will direct you to a bookcase about health, or modern and traditional medicine. Of course, because of your limitations, you may not check the books one by one (for example in a health bookcase there has 5000 books).
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning (0.63)
- Information Technology > Data Science > Data Mining > Big Data (0.40)