A federal appeals court affirmed a lower court's decision to dismiss a lawsuit that accused Google of unlawfully dominating the GPS navigation market. The ruling, from the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, found that the plaintiffs, including digital advertising business Dream Big Media, did not plausibly allege violations of antitrust law. The lawsuit claimed that companies were forced to purchase Google's Places API after buying other Google APIs for displaying maps on their websites, even if they preferred competing products. The court's decision effectively ends this particular legal challenge against the tech giant's practices in the navigation and mapping services sector.
Google Wins Appeal in GPS Navigation Market Antitrust Lawsuit
GOOG
Related News
GOOG
DeepSeek makes 75% API discount permanent, intensifying global AI price war
GOOG
Google appeals search monopoly ruling, arguing it won fair and square
GOOG
Alphabet sees $450 target, driven by AI and Cloud growth
GOOG
Waymo Pauses Freeway and Atlanta Robotaxis, Citing Flooding Software Updates
GOOG