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Publications (1)

2024JournalTop-10 Journal

Google's Chrome Antitrust Paradox

Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment & Technology Law(JETLAW) · Vol. 27, No. 3

Shaoor Munir, Konrad Kollnig, Anastasia Shuba, Zubair Shafiq

TL;DR:Chrome is central to Google's market dominance. We propose behavioral, structural, and divestment remedies.

This article delves into Google's dominance of the browser market, highlighting how Google's Chrome browser is playing a critical role in asserting Google's dominance in other markets. While Google perpetuates the perception that Google Chrome is a neutral platform built on open-source technologies, we argue that Chrome is instrumental in Google's strategy to reinforce its dominance in online advertising, publishing, and the browser market itself. Our examination of Google's strategic acquisitions, anti-competitive practices, and the implementation of so-called "privacy controls," shows that Chrome is far from a neutral gateway to the web. Rather, it serves as a key tool for Google to maintain and extend its market power, often to the detriment of competition and innovation. We examine how Chrome not only bolsters Google's position in advertising and publishing through practices such as coercion, self-preferencing, it also helps leverage its advertising clout to engage in a "pay-to-play" paradigm, which serves as a cornerstone in Google's larger strategy of market control. We also discuss potential regulatory interventions and remedies, drawing on historical antitrust precedents. We propose a triad of solutions motivated from our analysis of Google's abuse of Chrome: behavioral remedies targeting specific anti-competitive practices, structural remedies involving an internal separation of Google's divisions, and divestment of Chrome from Google. Despite Chrome's dominance and its critical role in Google's ecosystem, it has escaped antitrust scrutiny—a gap our article aims to bridge. Addressing this gap is instrumental to solve current market imbalances and future challenges brought on by increasingly hegemonizing technology firms, ensuring a competitive digital environment that nurtures innovation and safeguards consumer interests.

Media Coverage (8)

It's Time to Imagine Chrome Without Google

ProMarket (Stigler Center) · June 2025

Research on Google's Chrome antitrust paradox cited in discussion of potential Chrome divestiture and its implications for competition.

Google Chrome's Internet Supremacy Faces Major Threats

Newsweek · November 2025

Quoted on Google Chrome's market dominance and its role in Google's broader ecosystem control.

Google Forced to Sell Chrome Browser: What Could Happen

SlashGear · December 2024

Research on Chrome's antitrust implications referenced in analysis of DOJ's proposed remedy to force Chrome sale.

Google May Be Forced to Sell Chrome—Here Are the Winners and Losers

Business Insider · November 2024

Chrome antitrust research cited in coverage of potential Chrome divestiture winners and losers.

Chrome Is the Forgotten Fulcrum of Google's Dominance

ProMarket (Stigler Center) · August 2024

In-depth feature on our research showing how Chrome serves as a key tool for Google's market control across advertising and publishing.

How US History and Google's Own Behavior Justifies a Breakup

Tech Policy Press · November 2024

Research on Chrome's role in Google's ecosystem referenced in analysis of antitrust remedies.

Europe Restarts Browser War Against Chrome, Safari

The Next Web · May 2024

Research on browser market competition cited in coverage of European regulatory efforts.

Google Privacy Sandbox Progress Report Q4 2023

UK Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) · January 2024

CookieGraph research cited in official UK government report on Google's Privacy Sandbox initiative and third-party cookie deprecation.

Policy Research & Content | Shaoor Munir