Google to receive punishment for search monopoly by next August, says judge

Sundar Pichai

Image Credits: Mateusz Wlodarczyk/NurPhoto / Getty Images

A federal judge says he will deliver a punishment in Google’s antitrust case by August 2025, according to The New York Times, after ruling earlier this month that Google had abused its monopoly power over the search industry.

Judge Amit P. Mehta established a timeline for the remedies phase of Google’s antirust trial during a hearing in Washington, D.C. on Friday, the outcome of which could upend how people find information on the internet. Prosecutors have until the end of the year to submit their proposals, which could take aim at Google’s billion-dollar payments to Apple in exchange for priority placement, or potentially order Google to sell off parts of its business.

A lot can change in one year, however, especially given the upcoming U.S. presidential election. Republican and Democratic donors are both reportedly asking the candidates to shake up America’s tough regulatory environment. The outcome of Google Search’s antitrust case could be on the negotiating table in those discussions.

Brave integrates its own search results with its Leo AI assistant

Brave search Leo integration

Image Credits: Brave

Privacy-focused search engine and web browser company Brave Software is integrating search results into its Leo chatbot. Search results are based on the Brave Search API and Leo is integrated into the company’s browser. The company said that this integration will help users find more up-to-date information.

People can use this integration to fetch information like the latest scores, pull more context related to the topic while reading an article and search recent and relevant topics to create social media posts.

Image Credit: Brave

Brave emphasized that the integration is privacy-forward because the company doesn’t require users to log in. Plus, it doesn’t store your conversations with the AI chatbot on its server. Brave said it doesn’t use the responses to train its model. The company added that it sends requests to an anonymization server first to hide a user’s identity.

You can also purchase Leo Premium at $14.99/month, which gives you higher rate limits and access to the latest models. The company said it issues unlinkable tokens when you buy the subscription to prevent any personal identification.

Brave has tried to build its AI capability to attract more users to its browser and search engine. The company launched AI-powered summarization for its search product last year to show users the gist of answers to a search query. It also made the Leo AI Assistant available to everyone in November 2023. In April, the company introduced an AI Answer engine to search to answer users’ queries.

Other browsers such as Edge, Opera, Arc and SigmaOS have integrated AI to varying degrees. Brave likely wants to use its advantage of owning both a browser and search stack to refine its product.

Google improves search experience in the Chrome mobile app

Image Credits: Google

Facing new competition from startups like Arc, Google announced on Wednesday that it’s bringing five new features to the Chrome browser on mobile devices, each designed to enhance the search experience. These include new shortcuts for local search results, a refreshed address bar for easier navigation, trending search suggestions, live sports cards for fans, and more personalized search recommendations to cater to users’ browsing habits. The features will roll out soon for both Android and iOS devices. 

Among the new features is Chrome Actions, which helps users more easily perform certain tasks without going to settings. Now the feature is coming to local search results, meaning users will be able to search for a local business and quickly get access to shortcut buttons like “Call,” “Directions,” and “Reviews.”

This is currently available in Chrome on Android devices, and Google will launch an iOS version later this fall. 

Image Credits: Google

Google has also enhanced the Chrome address bar for iPads and Android tablets. The new design ensures that users can open the Chrome address bar and still view the web page they’re currently on, making full use of the larger tablet screens for a better browsing experience.

Additionally, the Chrome browser on iOS and Android devices will feature new shortcut suggestions based on past searches. The company explained that if someone types in “schedules” in Chrome and often clicks on the City Metro website, that website will now appear higher up in the search suggestions whenever the user searches “schedules.”

Image Credits: Google

Another useful feature is trending searches, which were previously only available on Android devices. Google is finally bringing trending search suggestions to the Chrome address bar on iOS, giving users the ability to see what popular searches are happening across Google Search. 

Google also launched live sports cards on its mobile version of Chrome’s Discover Feed to let users know when their favorite sports team is playing and to provide automatic updates with the latest scores and highlights from recent games. Users can customize the feature by selecting the three-dot menu in the Chrome mobile app.

Google is making search suggestions in Chrome more helpful

Uber just added a way to search for rides in other cities— here's how to use it

An Uber logo is seen on a sign outside the company's headquarters

Image Credits: Josh Edelson / AFP / Getty Images

As Uber gears up for the summer travel season, the company announced Tuesday a new feature to ease the planning process for riders. The feature offers a convenient way for users to search for destinations in another city and reserve rides in advance before their plane even lands. 

Uber’s new feature addresses the surge in summer travel and aims to make it easier for travelers to make transportation arrangements way before arrival. Airlines for America predicts that about 271 million passengers will fly worldwide between June and August, compared to 255 million last summer. According to the company, this feature has been a popular request among riders for a long time.

Image Credits: Uber

Now, when a user plans a ride, they can select the “Search in a different city” option and type in their desired destination. The most useful part about this is the reserve function, so travelers can book a pickup time from a location that they will travel to later that day or 90 days from now. Additionally, Uber provides estimated wait times and costs for rides from local airports and within various cities. 

The new feature is available in more than 10,000 cities, including Athens, Buenos Aires, Dublin, Florence, Paris, Rio De Janeiro, Santo Domingo, Sydney, Tokyo and Vancouver, among many others.

Uber launched the feature today alongside a host of others, including a partnership with Flying Blue to allow members to earn miles, additional reservations for its “Uber Bubbles” product where visitors in Paris can book champagne tours and a free one-hour cruise experience in Pont Marie.

Google brings Gemini-powered search history and Lens to Chrome desktop

Image Credits: Google

Google Thursday said that it is introducing new Gemini-powered features for Chrome’s desktop version, including Lens for desktop, tab compare for shopping assistance, and natural language integration for search history.

Years after introducing and evolving Google Lens on mobile, the feature is finally coming to desktop. Rolling out to users across the world in the coming days, Lens will live in the address bar, as well as the three-dot menu. After clicking, you can select a part of a page and ask more questions to get search results.

You can also tap on objects, such as someone’s backpack in a picture, and ask questions through multi-search to find a similar item in different colors or brands. Depending on the question you ask, you might also get AI Overviews in answers.

In addition to searching for shoppable items, users can also find out how much sunlight a plant needs, for example, or get help understanding a math equation.

Image Credits: Google

Google is also introducing a new feature called Tab Compare to aid shopping. In the coming weeks, Chrome will offer an AI-powered summary of similar items you might be searching across different tabs. For instance, if you are searching for a new Bluetooth speaker, the feature will show details such as product specs, features, price and ratings in one place, even when you’re looking at these details across different pages.

A tab in Chrome comparing the price, user reviews and other specs of three different portable speakers.
Image Credits: Google

One of the most useful updates of this lot is the ability to search your browsing history through natural language queries. Sometimes you don’t remember what page you visited apart from a few details. The company is rolling out AI-powered history search in the coming weeks as an opt-in feature for U.S. users.

Shortcut for “Search History” in the Chrome address bar with the input “what was that ice cream shop I looked at last week?. The drop down results provide the URL to the correct website “Emerald City Cones”.
Image Credits: Google

An example of a natural language query is, “What was that ice cream shop I looked at last week?” Google uses a combination of URL, title, and contents of the page to show search results.

The company said that it doesn’t use this data to train Gemini and won’t surface any information from the incognito session. Google currently can’t process AI-powered search history locally, however, so it uses cloud capacity to return results.

In January, the company introduced AI-powered features such as a writing assistant, tab organizer, and theme creator. In May, it rolled out a way to mention Gemini and ask the chatbot questions directly from the address bar.

Google brings Gemini-powered search history and Lens to Chrome desktop

Image Credits: Google

Google Thursday said that it is introducing new Gemini-powered features for Chrome’s desktop version, including Lens for desktop, tab compare for shopping assistance, and natural language integration for search history.

Years after introducing and evolving Google Lens on mobile, the feature is finally coming to desktop. Rolling out to users across the world in the coming days, Lens will live in the address bar, as well as the three-dot menu. After clicking, you can select a part of a page and ask more questions to get search results.

You can also tap on objects, such as someone’s backpack in a picture, and ask questions through multi-search to find a similar item in different colors or brands. Depending on the question you ask, you might also get AI Overviews in answers.

In addition to searching for shoppable items, users can also find out how much sunlight a plant needs, for example, or get help understanding a math equation.

Image Credits: Google

Google is also introducing a new feature called Tab Compare to aid shopping. In the coming weeks, Chrome will offer an AI-powered summary of similar items you might be searching across different tabs. For instance, if you are searching for a new Bluetooth speaker, the feature will show details such as product specs, features, price and ratings in one place, even when you’re looking at these details across different pages.

A tab in Chrome comparing the price, user reviews and other specs of three different portable speakers.
Image Credits: Google

One of the most useful updates of this lot is the ability to search your browsing history through natural language queries. Sometimes, you don’t remember what page you visited apart from a few details. The company is rolling out AI-powered history search in the coming weeks as an opt-in feature for U.S. users.

Shortcut for “Search History” in the Chrome address bar with the input “what was that ice cream shop I looked at last week?. The drop down results provide the URL to the correct website “Emerald City Cones”.
Image Credits: Google

An example of a natural language query is, “What was that ice cream shop I looked at last week?” Google uses a combination of URL, title, and contents of the page to show search results.

The company said that it doesn’t use this data to train Gemini and won’t surface any information from the incognito session. Google currently can’t process AI-powered search history locally, however, so it uses cloud capacity to return results.

In January, the company introduced AI-powered features such as a writing assistant, tab organizer, and theme creator. In May, it rolled out a way to mention Gemini and ask the chatbot questions directly from the address bar.

Brave integrates its own search results with its Leo AI assistant

Brave search Leo integration

Image Credits: Brave

Privacy-focused search engine and web browser company Brave Software is integrating search results into its Leo chatbot. Search results are based on the Brave Search API and Leo is integrated into the company’s browser. The company said that this integration will help users find more up-to-date information.

People can use this integration to fetch information like the latest scores, pull more context related to the topic while reading an article and search recent and relevant topics to create social media posts.

Image Credit: Brave

Brave emphasized that the integration is privacy-forward because the company doesn’t require users to log in. Plus, it doesn’t store your conversations with the AI chatbot on its server. Brave said it doesn’t use the responses to train its model. The company added that it sends requests to an anonymization server first to hide a user’s identity.

You can also purchase Leo Premium at $14.99/month, which gives you higher rate limits and access to the latest models. The company said it issues unlinkable tokens when you buy the subscription to prevent any personal identification.

Brave has tried to build its AI capability to attract more users to its browser and search engine. The company launched AI-powered summarization for its search product last year to show users the gist of answers to a search query. It also made the Leo AI Assistant available to everyone in November 2023. In April, the company introduced an AI Answer engine to search to answer users’ queries.

Other browsers such as Edge, Opera, Arc and SigmaOS have integrated AI to varying degrees. Brave likely wants to use its advantage of owning both a browser and search stack to refine its product.

Google improves search experience in the Chrome mobile app

Image Credits: Google

Facing new competition from startups like Arc, Google announced on Wednesday that it’s bringing five new features to the Chrome browser on mobile devices, each designed to enhance the search experience. These include new shortcuts for local search results, a refreshed address bar for easier navigation, trending search suggestions, live sports cards for fans, and more personalized search recommendations to cater to users’ browsing habits. The features will roll out soon for both Android and iOS devices. 

Among the new features is Chrome Actions, which helps users more easily perform certain tasks without going to settings. Now the feature is coming to local search results, meaning users will be able to search for a local business and quickly get access to shortcut buttons like “Call,” “Directions,” and “Reviews.”

This is currently available in Chrome on Android devices, and Google will launch an iOS version later this fall. 

Image Credits: Google

Google has also enhanced the Chrome address bar for iPads and Android tablets. The new design ensures that users can open the Chrome address bar and still view the web page they’re currently on, making full use of the larger tablet screens for a better browsing experience.

Additionally, the Chrome browser on iOS and Android devices will feature new shortcut suggestions based on past searches. The company explained that if someone types in “schedules” in Chrome and often clicks on the City Metro website, that website will now appear higher up in the search suggestions whenever the user searches “schedules.”

Image Credits: Google

Another useful feature is trending searches, which were previously only available on Android devices. Google is finally bringing trending search suggestions to the Chrome address bar on iOS, giving users the ability to see what popular searches are happening across Google Search. 

Google also launched live sports cards on its mobile version of Chrome’s Discover Feed to let users know when their favorite sports team is playing and to provide automatic updates with the latest scores and highlights from recent games. Users can customize the feature by selecting the three-dot menu in the Chrome mobile app.

Google is making search suggestions in Chrome more helpful

Uber just added a way to search for rides in other cities— here's how to use it

An Uber logo is seen on a sign outside the company's headquarters

Image Credits: Josh Edelson / AFP / Getty Images

As Uber gears up for the summer travel season, the company announced Tuesday a new feature to ease the planning process for riders. The feature offers a convenient way for users to search for destinations in another city and reserve rides in advance before their plane even lands. 

Uber’s new feature addresses the surge in summer travel and aims to make it easier for travelers to make transportation arrangements way before arrival. Airlines for America predicts that about 271 million passengers will fly worldwide between June and August, compared to 255 million last summer. According to the company, this feature has been a popular request among riders for a long time.

Image Credits: Uber

Now, when a user plans a ride, they can select the “Search in a different city” option and type in their desired destination. The most useful part about this is the reserve function, so travelers can book a pickup time from a location that they will travel to later that day or 90 days from now. Additionally, Uber provides estimated wait times and costs for rides from local airports and within various cities. 

The new feature is available in more than 10,000 cities, including Athens, Buenos Aires, Dublin, Florence, Paris, Rio De Janeiro, Santo Domingo, Sydney, Tokyo and Vancouver, among many others.

Uber launched the feature today alongside a host of others, including a partnership with Flying Blue to allow members to earn miles, additional reservations for its “Uber Bubbles” product where visitors in Paris can book champagne tours and a free one-hour cruise experience in Pont Marie.

seen in Landover, Maryland,

Walmart debuts generative AI search and AI replenishment features at CES

seen in Landover, Maryland,

Image Credits: SAUL LOEB/AFP / Getty Images

In a keynote address at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Walmart president and CEO Doug McMillon and other Walmart execs offered a glimpse as to how the retail giant was putting new technologies, including augmented reality (AR), drones, generative AI and other artificial intelligence tech to work in order improve the shopping experience for customers.

At the trade show, the company revealed a handful of new products, including two AI-powered tools for managing product search and replenishment, as well as a new beta AR social commerce platform called “Shop with Friends.” It also highlighted how it was using AI in other areas of its business, including within Sam’s Club and in apps used by store associates.

Most notably, Walmart is launching a new generative AI search feature on iOS that will allow customers to search for products by use cases, instead of by product or brand names. For example, you could ask Walmart to return search results for things needed for a “football watch party,” instead of specifically typing in searches for chips, wings, drinks or a 90-inch TV. These enhanced search results will span categories, rivaling Google’s SGE (Search Generative Experience), which can recommend products and show various factors to consider, along with reviews, prices, images and more.

Image Credits: Walmart

Ahead of CES, the company had demonstrated an AI shopping assistant that would let customers interact with a chatbot as they shopped, to ask questions and receive personalized product suggestions, as well. At the time, Walmart teased that a generative AI-powered search feature was also in the works. It suggested customers could ask for things like a “unicorn-themed birthday party” and get results like unicorn-themed napkins, balloons, streamers and more. Now the feature is rolling out on mobile devices, iOS first.

Another potentially promising use of AI involves the replenishment of frequently ordered items.

Walmart will initially test this use case with Walmart InHome Replenishment, which will use AI and its existing replenishment expertise combined to create automated online shopping carts for customers with items they regularly order. Because it’s only available through the InHome program, these items are then delivered to a customer’s fridge in their kitchen or garage using the smart lock-powered InHome delivery service, but it will not be a subscription service.

The company also noted that customers will be able to remove items from their basket, as needed, and the service will adjust to customer’s changing needs over time.

Image Credits: Walmart

However, if the feature works well, it’s not hard to imagine how it could be put to use to offer replenishment of other household items as well, similar to Amazon’s Subscribe-and-Save.

Surprisingly, Amazon has not yet leveraged AI to do the same (i.e. to augment or replace Dash Replenishment). However, the online retailer has been putting AI to work in other ways, including by helping connect customers with the right product by summarizing product reviews, highlighting key attributes or helping them find clothes that fit. 

Image Credits: Walmart

Another new Walmart product making a debut at CES is “Shop with Friends,” an AR shopping tool that lets customers share virtual outfits they create with their friends and then get feedback on their finds. The tool combines Walmart’s AI-powered virtual try-on tech, launched last year, with social features.

Image Credits: Walmart

CEO Doug McMillon referred to the suite of new products as something he called “adaptive retail” — that is, retail experiences that are personalized and flexible.

“While omnichannel retail has been around for decades, this new type of retail — adaptive retail — takes it a step further, said Suresh Kumar, global chief technology officer, and chief development officer, Walmart Inc., in a statement shared ahead of the CES keynote. “It’s retail that is not only e-commerce or in-store, but a single, unified retail experience that seamlessly blends the best aspects of all channels. And for Walmart, adaptive retail is rooted in a clear focus on people,” he said. 

The company touched on other ways it’s employing AI, as well.

Walmart’s Sam’s Club will introduce an AI and computer vision-powered technology that helps solve the problem of waiting in line for receipt verification when exiting the store. The pilot, currently running in 10 locations, will confirm members have paid for their items without requiring a store associate to check their charts. Instead, computer vision tech will capture images of customers’ carts and AI will speed the process of matching cart items to sales. Walmart expects to bring the tech to its nearly 600 clubs by year-end.

Image Credits: Walmart

In another area, Walmart’s generative AI tool for store associates, My Assistant, will be expanded to 11 countries outside the U.S. in 2024, where it will work in employees’ native languages. Already, the tool has become available in Canada, Mexico, Chile, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala and Nicaragua and is on track for launches in India and South Africa. My Assistant helps employees with writing, summarizing large documents and offering “thought starters” to spark creativity, Walmart says.

Image Credits: Walmart

On the matter of AI, McMillon stressed that the company wouldn’t prioritize the technology without considering the potential implications. Instead, Walmart’s “underlying principle is that we should use technology to serve people and not the other way around,” he said.

Still, McMillon admitted that AI will mean some jobs will be eliminated.

“No doubt some tasks will go away and some roles will change. And some of them should, like the ones that involve lifting heavy weights or doing repetitive tasks,” the exec explained. “As that’s happening, we’re designing new roles that our associates tell us are more enjoyable and satisfying, and also often result in higher pay. So we’re investing to help our associates transition to this shared future,” McMillon added.

During the keynote, McMillon also brought Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella onstage, after announcing that Walmart used large language models from Azure OpenAI alongside its own retail-specific models.

Nadella spoke broadly about the breakthroughs made possible with generative AI, including in areas like coding, productivity apps, like Microsoft’s own, healthcare, education and more, adding that with new technology, “one has to be mindful that you want to be able to amplify the opportunity with it…and then also be very mindful of the unintended consequences of this technology.”

Outside of AI, Walmart is looking to other new technology for faster deliveries.

The company announced it’s expanding its drone delivery service in the Dallas-Ft. Worth metro to 1.8 million households, or 75% of the metroplex area. The deliveries, which take place in 30 minutes or less, are powered by Wing and Zipline. Walmart also notes that 75% of the 120,000 items in a Walmart Supercenter meet the size and weight requirements for drone delivery. To date, Walmart has done over 20,000 drone deliveries in its two-year trial.

Read more about CES 2024 on TechCrunch

Walmart experiments with generative AI tools that can help you plan a party or decorate