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    Home » Google to spend $500mn on compliance to settle shareholder antitrust suit
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    Google to spend $500mn on compliance to settle shareholder antitrust suit

    Arabian Media staffBy Arabian Media staffJune 2, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Google’s parent company Alphabet will spend at least $500mn over the next ten years on rebuilding its global compliance structure, under the terms of a proposed settlement with shareholders suing the company for alleged antitrust violations. 

    The preliminary agreement follows a series of legal setbacks for the tech giant in the US. Multiple courts have found that the Silicon Valley group has monopolised the search, advertising and Android app markets, with the US government pushing for a potential break-up of the company.

    The settlement, which was filed in a California federal court on Friday but still requires approval from the judge in the case, would lead to Google establishing a standalone committee within its board tasked with overseeing regulatory issues.

    A new body made up of senior executives would meanwhile report directly to chief executive Sundar Pichai, assisted by another group consisting of product managers and internal compliance experts.

    This will be accompanied by an overhaul of the company’s policies and processes for handling risk assessment. Alphabet does not admit to any wrongdoing under the settlement.

    “These reforms, rarely achieved in shareholder derivative actions, constitute a comprehensive overhaul of Alphabet’s compliance function . . . as well as prevent future compliance and antitrust problems from arising,” the court document filed on Friday says. The changes will have to stay in place for at least four years.

    The case was brought against the company, as well as current and former top executives, an behalf of Google shareholders by a Michigan pension fund in 2021. 

    It claims that Google engaged in systematic anti-competitive conduct across multiple markets, triggering major enforcement actions that have resulted in substantial costs to the business, including reputational damage.

    Google’s approach to legal and regulatory challenges has come under scrutiny in recent years as a number of antitrust cases have come to trial. 

    In December 2023 a California federal judge criticised Google for failing to preserve evidence in a case brought by Epic Games, after summoning the company’s chief legal officer Kent Walker to answer questions about internal policies around email and chat deletion.

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    The jury in that case found Google had abused its power to extract monopoly profits from the Play Store.

    The US Department of Justice, which won its search monopolisation case against Google in August last year, similarly accused Google of trying to cover up evidence. The judge in that case faulted the company for going to great lengths to “avoid creating a paper trail for regulators and litigants”.

    The DoJ won another case against Google in April over its alleged monopoly in digital advertising.

    The litigation threatens a break-up of the tech group, although the appeals process will delay any immediate impact to its business. 

    Google did not immediately respond to a request for comment.



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