The U.S. Department of Justice is reportedly seeking to force Google to sell Chrome, according to Bloomberg.
Cleaving apart the browser from the rest of the company is only one of the measures the DOJ will ask the courts to enforce, following a ruling that the company had maintained an illegal search monopoly.
While tearing Chrome from Google might seem a relatively simple measure, there are a huge number of complicating factors that make it a trickier operation than it might first appear. Factors that could both harm consumers and the wider browser industry.
Here’s why splitting Chrome from Google is no easy task.
The Chromium Complication
First, it’s worth pointing out exactly what Chrome is.
Chrome is a browser built on the open-source Chromium browser engine. Anyone can build a browser using Chromium and many companies have, including Microsoft Edge, Vivaldi and The Arc browser. Those browsers naturally share many of Chrome’s features, such as the ability to install extensions from the Chrome Web Store.
The DOJ can’t force Google to sell Chromium because it doesn’t own it. What you would in effect be selling is the Chrome user base, the hundreds of millions of people who use Chrome on a daily basis, rather than the underlying browser technology.
However, Google and its developers are by far the biggest contributors to the Chromium project. They’ve created much of the existing codebase and largely set its direction. If Google were forced to sell its browser, it would throw doubt over the long-term future of Chromium.
Would Google also be forced to transfer the developers as part of the sale? Would other contributors, such as Microsoft, be forced to step up to fill the gap left by Google’s development team? Would it effectively be handing control of the Chromium project from one monopolist to another?
Who Gets The Chrome User Data?
Today’s web browsers suck up an enormous amount of personal data. They store your favorites, your browsing history, your usernames and passwords, and a lot of cached data that is valuable to advertisers.
If Google is forced to sell Chrome, who gets control of that data? Yes, it’s relatively trivial to transfer some of that data from one browser to another, but it would cause significant consumer disruption if you were forced to start with a clean browser install with another owner.
The login process is another complication. Currently, you log in to Chrome with your Google account. That presumably wouldn’t be permitted under a new owner, meaning users will need to create a fresh account with the new Chrome proprietor, with all the friction, hassle and potential for fraud that creates.
Who Would Buy Chrome?
Then there’s the matter of finding a buyer. There’s no doubt acquiring a user base counted in the hundreds of millions would be an attractive proposition, but it would likely come at an extremely high price that few companies could afford.
Microsoft might seem like the obvious candidate, especially given it already has a Chromium-based browser, but given its own past history with competitive abuse of the web browser it seems unlikely that would be approved.
Meta would be another strong candidate, but its dominance of the social media space might create another competition issue.
Other rival browser makers would either have little incentive or insufficient resources to acquire Chrome. Apple already has Safari and would face increased anti-competition scrutiny of its own, even if it did want to acquire Chrome.
Firefox-owner Mozilla is cash-strapped (it recently laid off 30% of its workforce) and already dependent on Google for much of its funding. Given the DOJ is also pushing for a ban on Google striking exclusive deals with browser makers to be their default search engine, Mozilla’s future finances are on an even shakier footing.
The other browser rivals are largely minnows who would surely struggle to find the resources to buy Chrome.
None of this is to say that separating Chrome from Google shouldn’t happen, but it’s by no means a simple job if the DOJ does get its way.
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