Google's new antitrust defense is AI

3 days ago

For more than a year, company executives threw around the words artificial intelligence to signal that they too were on the cutting edge. Feeding the investor frenzy for lower costs, boosted productivity, and smarter products, "AI" became an earnings call mantra. On Wednesday, Google (GOOG, GOOGL) showed another way companies can wield AI and the excitement around it: as an antitrust defense.

In a blog post responding to the Justice Department's proposal to potentially break up Google, the company pointed to the blossoming market for AI and the evolution of search as reasons why the government's case is so misguided.

The Justice Department in a court filing earlier this week outlined potential remedies to reinvigorate competition in the search engine market. Google will have a chance to formally respond, but in the blog post, the company said the government seems to be pursuing a sweeping agenda that threatens to harm consumers and American competitiveness.

"The DOJ’s outline also comes at a time when competition in how people find information is blooming, with all sorts of new entrants emerging and new technologies like AI transforming the industry," wrote Lee-Anne Mulholland, Google's vice president of regulatory affairs.

In Google's view, the government's heavy-handed approach to transforming the search market ignores the nascent developments in AI, the fresh competition in the space, and new modes of seeking information online, like AI-powered answer engines.

The energy around AI and the potential disruption of how users interact with search is, competitively speaking, a negative for Google, said Wedbush analyst Dan Ives. But in another way, as a defense against antitrust charges, it’s a positive.

"That’s an argument against monopoly that bodes well for Google," he said.

FILE - This Tuesday, July 19, 2016, file photo shows the Google logo at the company's headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File)

The US Justice Department said in a new court filing that it may recommend a break up of Google as an antidote to unhealthy competition in the search engine market (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

Others are more skeptical of the AI defense.

"The DOJ has specifically noted that this evolution in technology is precisely why they are intervening at this point in time," said Gil Luria, an analyst at DA Davidson. "They want to make sure that Google is not able to convert the monopoly it currently has in Search into a monopoly in AI Enhanced Search."

Google's enormous investment in AI-powered search tools also carries risks for the company. At a fundamental level, the AI transition marks an overhaul of Google’s core search product. And since many people experience the internet through Google, powered by its advertising empire — analysts have questioned whether Google might be endangering its search business to prop up a new, untested AI-driven regime.

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