cover of episode Google Must Sell Chrome Browser, DOJ Says

Google Must Sell Chrome Browser, DOJ Says

2024/11/21
logo of podcast WSJ What’s News

WSJ What’s News

Key Insights

Why is the DOJ recommending Google sell its Chrome browser?

The DOJ suggests Google sell Chrome to address its monopolization of the online search market, as part of broader antitrust remedies.

What other remedies did the DOJ request in the Google antitrust case?

The DOJ also requested Google be prevented from giving preferential access to its search engine on Android devices and be forced to sell Android if it violates this rule.

How did NVIDIA's recent financial results impact its stock?

NVIDIA's stock slipped in off-hours trading despite surging sales and profits, as the results failed to meet investor expectations.

What significant event did Ukraine report regarding Russia's use of missiles?

Ukraine reported that Russia fired an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) for the first time in the war, targeting the city of Dnipro.

What is Donald Trump's stance on the Education Department?

Trump has vowed to dismantle the Education Department, aiming to send education back to the states and reduce federal support.

Who did Trump nominate for Education Secretary and what are her views on education?

Trump nominated Linda McMahon, a Trump loyalist known for her support of school choice and tougher accountability in education.

What challenges does Trump face in actually shutting down the Education Department?

Shutting down the Education Department would require substantial support from Congress and could impact federal funding for schools, which makes up about 10% of school budgets.

How did Elon Musk's AI startup, XAI, perform in its latest funding round?

XAI raised $5 billion in its latest funding round, valuing the company at $50 billion, more than double its previous valuation.

Chapters

The Department of Justice proposes that Google should sell its Chrome browser as a remedy for its monopolization of the online search market.
  • DOJ requests Google to sell Chrome and Android if it violates antitrust rules.
  • Google executive calls the remedy 'wildly overbroad'.
  • Trial to decide on remedies is scheduled for April, with a final decision by August.

Shownotes Transcript

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The DOJ says that Google should be forced to sell its Chrome web browser. Plus, NVIDIA's sales soar, but topping investor expectations for the company is becoming increasingly difficult.

And we'll go inside Donald Trump's push to eliminate the Education Department. The question is, is he just going to eliminate a bureaucracy and send these functions to other agencies? Or is he actually going to reduce federal support in a substantial way to schools? It's Thursday, November 21st. I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal. And here is the AM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories moving your world today.

We begin with an update on the U.S. government's successful antitrust case against Google. The Department of Justice says Google should be forced to sell off its popular Chrome web browser as part of a suite of requested remedies that it told a judge are needed to fix the company's monopolization of the online search market.

The DOJ also requested Google be prevented from giving preferential access to its search engine on the billions of devices that use its Android mobile operating system, and that if it was found to violate that rule, it should also be forced to sell Android.

Journal reporter Miles Krupa in San Francisco reacted to the DOJ's requested remedies. The Department of Justice has been clear that it's seeking all possibilities here, you know, structural remedies such as divestitures and more behavioral remedies. And so in some ways, it's not totally unexpected that they would ask for a divestiture of chrome here.

But it's somewhat surprising in that the case really centered on Google's contracts with third parties, not its own self-preferencing on the Chrome browser. So this is going to be a real test of how far antitrust laws can go in limiting the conduct of a large company like Google in the year 2024 or as it may be 2025.

A Google executive described the DOJ's suggested remedy as wildly overbroad and said the company would file its own proposed remedy next month. A trial to decide how to address Google's antitrust violations is scheduled to begin in April, with the judge in the case saying he plans to finalize his decision by August.

Well, also in the DOJ's crosshairs is Gautam Adani, the billionaire founder of one of India's biggest conglomerates, who was charged yesterday with orchestrating a $250 million bribery scheme to secure lucrative solar energy supply contracts. Prosecutors allege the executive personally met with Indian officials to advance the illicit deal and secure contracts worth billions of dollars for one of his companies. And

and that he and others misrepresented the company's anti-bribery and corruption practices to U.S. investors and financial institutions. Eight executives have been charged in total. In a statement, the Adani Group denied the allegations, calling them baseless. Shares in Adani Group companies fell sharply on the news today.

Ukraine says Russia has fired an intercontinental ballistic missile targeting the city of Dnipro, which if confirmed would be the first time Moscow has used an ICBM in the war. According to Ukraine's Air Force, the ICBM was fired along with eight other missiles in an attack that local authorities say wounded two people.

ICBMs are designed to carry nuclear warheads, and their use would mark a sharp escalation in the war as well as a reminder of Russia's nuclear capability just days after Ukrainian forces began using newly authorized Western missiles to hit targets inside Russia.

On Capitol Hill, the Senate has rejected multiple efforts by Vermont's Bernie Sanders to stop the sale of offensive weapons to Israel, with only 17 to 19 senators backing measures that would have prevented the transfer of certain tank and mortar rounds and guidance kits attached to bombs. Speaking before the votes, Sanders described them as a test of America's credibility on the world stage. How do you critique Iran for their terrible human rights record?

How do you critique China or Russia for their terrible human rights records? Because if you get here on the floor of the Senate and you make that critique, people around the world will laugh at you. Sanders's push comes after the Biden administration let a 30-day deadline for Israel to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza come and go.

The administration previously warned Israel it risked a cut to arms sales if it failed to reverse what it called the downward humanitarian trajectory in the territory. Nvidia's shares are slipping in off-hours trading after its results, another quarter of surging sales and profits, failed to meet the lofty expectations of investors who've been piling into the stock.

However, NVIDIA's revenue projections for the current quarter suggest that its next-generation AI chips, known as Blackwell, are in high demand from customers like Microsoft, Google, Meta, and XAI.

Asa Fitch covers NVIDIA for the Journal. NVIDIA had had some issues manufacturing those chips in its previous quarter, and it took a significant amount of charges. In fact, more than $900 million of charges in its last quarter because of that. But this time around, if anything, the company projected that Blackwell, its next generation chips, were set to do very well. They said they were expecting even better revenue from those chips than they had previously discussed.

They previously talked about several billion dollars of revenue in the current quarter that's going to end in January here. So now they're saying that things are looking better than they thought before.

And in other markets news, Elon Musk's artificial intelligence startup, XAI, has told investors that it raised $5 billion in its latest funding round, valuing the company at about $50 billion, more than twice what it was valued at several months ago. According to our reporting, Qatar's sovereign wealth fund and investment firms Valor Equity Partners, Sequoia Capital, and Andreessen Horowitz are expected to take part in the round.

XAI plans to use the new cache in part to finance the purchase of 100,000 additional NVIDIA chips for training AI models. Coming up, journal education reporter Sarah Randazzo joins us to explain what Donald Trump's selection of Linda McMahon tells us about his plans for the education department. That's after the break.

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Donald Trump said this week that, quote, we will send education back to the states and Linda will spearhead that effort. The Linda Trump is referring to is Linda McMahon, whom he's nominating for education secretary, overseeing a department that the president-elect has vowed to dismantle. And to find out more about those plans, our Kate Bullivant spoke to Journal Education reporter Sarah Randazzo.

So, Sarah, let's start with Trump's pick for education secretary. Linda McMahon is probably most well known for being the co-founder of WWE, World Wrestling Entertainment. But could you tell us a little bit more about her and her views on education?

So she was definitely a surprise pick in education circles. But what Linda McMahon is, is a real Trump loyalist. She's served on the transition team. She's helped raise tons of money for him and fundraise. And so she's someone who's close to the president and had been widely seen as the leading contender for the Commerce Secretary job. So when that

position went elsewhere. Some are seeing this as a bit of a consolation prize, I suppose. But she does have a little bit of education we could find in her background. She supports school choice, which is a bit of a euphemism for supporting options away from the traditional public schools, such as going to charter school or maybe homeschooling or private school or options like that.

like that. And also she supports tougher accountability and local oversight in education. So what does Trump's pick for education secretary tell us about his plans for the department? Yeah, it's hard to tell how...

Linda McMahon's choice in particular impacts this, but on the campaign trail, Trump repeatedly said he would get rid of the education department. And there's been a lot of speculation on what that would mean and how he would do it. The big question is whether by dismantling the department, he would actually shut down the programs and supports that it provides for schools. Some of the big ones are money that the education department helps oversee that it sends to schools with low-income students and students with disabilities. And so the question is, is he just going to eliminate a bureaucracy?

and send these functions to other agencies? Or is he actually going to reduce federal support in a substantial way to schools? Really, the majority of education is run locally through local and state dollars. A lot of it is tax dollars and other money. The federal money on an average makes up about 10% of school budgets for K-12 school districts. It varies by state. Interestingly, we did the math in the 14 states who get the

largest proportion of their education budget from the federal government all voted for Trump this term. And so it's not the majority of a budget, but if you got rid of 10% of funding, school districts would have to scramble to find ways to meet those needs. So with that in mind, are Trump and McMahon likely to actually shut down the education department? You know, I'm not in the prediction business, so I don't want to say, but there will definitely be discussions about it. There's probably steps they could take

on their own. I don't know if that would be a reduction in workforce, something like that. But to actually fundamentally change the department and get rid of it would take quite a bit of support from Congress. So it remains to be seen whether that can be achieved. Another thing Trump has promised to do is to fight the so-called woke curriculum, meaning left-wing ideology in schools and universities. How would he go about doing this? Yeah.

Yeah, this is one of the contradictions in what the president-elect has said about the education department, because the federal government really can't, by law, they really cannot dictate what shows up in individual classrooms across the country. And so at the same time that he says he wants to get rid of what curriculum, that isn't really a function that the federal government could do, at least under our current system. That was journal education reporter Sarah Randazzo. Sarah, thanks so much for your time. Sure thing. Thanks.

And that's it for What's News for Thursday morning. Today's show was produced by Kate Boulivant and Daniel Bach with supervising producer Christina Rocca. And I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal. We will be back tonight with a new show. Until then, thanks for listening. ♪