Some long overdue concessions will be made but Chrome is a choice, not a monopoly.
While I have massive problems with Google, and they are in everything, this is government overreach and hinges on Chinese control levels.
Some new GPDR guidelines or laws will come into practice to protect the end-user and Google's flex on banning adblocks and distribution of data will be sculpted but regulating a program which is given freely, with alternatives available, can be legally adapted to suit any particular niche and has increased productivity in every market is more complex than simply selling it off and presuming everything is fixed.
Can't happen, or rather shouldn't happen.
Some long overdue concessions will be made but Chrome is a choice, not a monopoly.
While I have massive problems with Google, and they are in everything, this is government overreach and hinges on Chinese control levels.
Some new GPDR guidelines or laws will come into practice to protect the end-user and Google's flex on banning adblocks and distribution of data will be sculpted but regulating a program which is given freely, with alternatives available, can be legally adapted to suit any particular niche and has increased productivity in every market is more complex than simply selling it off and presuming everything is fixed.
It's the whole market that matters, not a single product. You're missing the forest for the trees.