Google's Payments To Apple Reached $20 Billion in 2022, Antitrust Court Documents Show (yahoo.com) 27
Alphabet paid Apple $20 billion in 2022 for Google to be the default search engine in the Safari browser, according to newly unsealed court documents in the Justice Department's antitrust lawsuit against Google. From a report: The deal between the two tech giants is at the heart of the landmark case, in which antitrust enforcers allege Google has illegally monopolized the market for online search and related advertising. The Justice Department and Google will offer closing arguments in the case Thursday and Friday, with a decision expected later this year.
Google and Apple had hoped to shield the payment amount from public disclosure. At the trial last fall, Apple executives testified that Google paid "billions," without specifying a number. A Google witness later accidentally disclosed that Google pays 36% of the revenue it earns from search ads to Apple. Court documents filed late Tuesday ahead of the closing arguments mark the first public confirmation of the figures by Apple's senior vice president of services, Eddy Cue. Such numbers aren't disclosed by either company in their securities filings. The documents also revealed the importance of the payments to Apple's bottom line. For instance, in 2020, Google's payments to Apple constituted 17.5% of the iPhone maker's operating income.
Google and Apple had hoped to shield the payment amount from public disclosure. At the trial last fall, Apple executives testified that Google paid "billions," without specifying a number. A Google witness later accidentally disclosed that Google pays 36% of the revenue it earns from search ads to Apple. Court documents filed late Tuesday ahead of the closing arguments mark the first public confirmation of the figures by Apple's senior vice president of services, Eddy Cue. Such numbers aren't disclosed by either company in their securities filings. The documents also revealed the importance of the payments to Apple's bottom line. For instance, in 2020, Google's payments to Apple constituted 17.5% of the iPhone maker's operating income.
Just out of curiosity (Score:2)
For science, I would like to see what happens if Google doesn't re-up the agreement for a year. What would Apple do?
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Fire its CEO.
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> I am surprised to learn that if Apple gives google more info about me that advertisers will pay more for, they profit.
I read both of the linked articles and can't find anything remotely like this. Apple isn't giving any data to Google, at least nothing in the articles suggest it is and you haven't provided any evidence of such.
> Changing my search engine (s) to DuckDuckGo
DuckDuckGo sends info to Bing and doesn't block their trackers: "Unfortunately our Microsoft search syndication agreement prevent
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For years I was under the impression Apple made its profit selling devices and not my information. Turns out I was wrong. I am surprised to learn that if Apple gives google more info about me that advertisers will pay more for, they profit. I guess all their BS ads on privacy was money well spent on billboards etc.. Changing my search engine (s) to DuckDuckGo.
I did that years ago.
That's why this is a non-issue.
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From what I read...Apple isn't giving Google any info...this money seems to be paid just for Apple making Google the default search engine on apps li
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if Google doesn't re-up the agreement for a year. What would Apple do?
If you think about it the "agreement" is basically a bribe from Google to keep Apple from competing with them and entering the search business: "You can spend billions trying to catch up to us or we can pay you billions to use our tech instead."
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It would make its own search engine, which might be devastating for Google. Google's page rank patent is expired. Yes, they have improved since then .. but pagerank alone is sufficient to make a passable search engine.
Does money even matter for these two parties? (Score:3)
This is like sending coals from eastern Newcastle to western Newcastle.
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Why does this matter? (Score:2)
Why is it anybody's business if Google thinks it's worth $20 to Google to be listed as the Default Search?
So long as the User can change it (which they can, easily), how is that a Conspiracy?
Re: Why does this matter? (Score:2)
It was a secret agreement, so calling it a conspiracy seems like a reasonable, but inflammatory way of describing it
The huge dollar sum suggests that Google might be more interested in harming competitors than making a profit on each year's Apple device searches. But I don't know for much Google makes off Apple users . . . maybe you'd be fool not to be the highest bidder if you had $20b and a search engine.
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It was a secret agreement, so calling it a conspiracy seems like a reasonable, but inflammatory way of describing it
The huge dollar sum suggests that Google might be more interested in harming competitors than making a profit on each year's Apple device searches. But I don't know for much Google makes off Apple users . . . maybe you'd be fool not to be the highest bidder if you had $20b and a search engine.
Still am having a huge bit of trouble determining a Victim or Damages.
As far as "Secret": There have been multitudinous articles, etc. about this Agreement for multitudes of years. The Amount is of no moment. Big Companies == Big Bucks.
So?
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What are you on about?
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And don't get me started about the fact that Mozilla brags about their deal with Google, because that's their major source of income. And nobody bats an eye.
Wasted money (Score:2)
It's money wasted in my case. I immediately switched to DuckDuckGo. Took about ten seconds.
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It's money wasted in my case. I immediately switched to DuckDuckGo. Took about ten seconds.
My point exactly.
Who's the Victim? What are the Damages?
That's concerning (Score:2)
in 2020, Google's payments to Apple constituted 17.5% of Apple's operating income.
Apple is one of the biggest companies in the world, selling luxury hardware -- and this much of their income is from ads? No wonder everyone and their mom is trying to shove ads wherever they can.
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in 2020, Google's payments to Apple constituted 17.5% of Apple's operating income.
Apple is one of the biggest companies in the world, selling luxury hardware -- and this much of their income is from ads? No
FTFY.