AI start-up Perplexity makes surprise bid for Google Chrome
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AI start-up Perplexity makes surprise $34.5bn bid for Google Chrome
One technology industry investor called the $34.5bn offer a "stunt" that is much lower than Chrome's true value.
(www.bbc.com)
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This post did not contain any content.
AI start-up Perplexity makes surprise $34.5bn bid for Google Chrome
One technology industry investor called the $34.5bn offer a "stunt" that is much lower than Chrome's true value.
(www.bbc.com)
If Google is forced to sell Chrome, is anything stopping them from simply developing another Chromium based browser and immediately beginning to siphon customers from what is now the competition?
Because that seems to be something that would seriously limit the value of the browser.
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If Google is forced to sell Chrome, is anything stopping them from simply developing another Chromium based browser and immediately beginning to siphon customers from what is now the competition?
Because that seems to be something that would seriously limit the value of the browser.
They would just invest a bunch of money into a browser and be forced to sell it.
I’d like to see them just open source it.
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If Google is forced to sell Chrome, is anything stopping them from simply developing another Chromium based browser and immediately beginning to siphon customers from what is now the competition?
Because that seems to be something that would seriously limit the value of the browser.
The sale often includes a period during which the one selling can't create a similar product again to compete with what they sold
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This post did not contain any content.
AI start-up Perplexity makes surprise $34.5bn bid for Google Chrome
One technology industry investor called the $34.5bn offer a "stunt" that is much lower than Chrome's true value.
(www.bbc.com)
Google, being evil: "Sold!"
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They would just invest a bunch of money into a browser and be forced to sell it.
I’d like to see them just open source it.
Chromium already is open source.
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This post did not contain any content.
AI start-up Perplexity makes surprise $34.5bn bid for Google Chrome
One technology industry investor called the $34.5bn offer a "stunt" that is much lower than Chrome's true value.
(www.bbc.com)
In cash?
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This post did not contain any content.
AI start-up Perplexity makes surprise $34.5bn bid for Google Chrome
One technology industry investor called the $34.5bn offer a "stunt" that is much lower than Chrome's true value.
(www.bbc.com)
It's a gimmick to get publicity. But if it happens, the company has to generate revenue to pay it off.
Guess how browser makers make money off a 'free' product?
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The sale often includes a period during which the one selling can't create a similar product again to compete with what they sold
That typically happens when the seller actually wants to sell though.
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If Google is forced to sell Chrome, is anything stopping them from simply developing another Chromium based browser and immediately beginning to siphon customers from what is now the competition?
Because that seems to be something that would seriously limit the value of the browser.
I have some personal experience with this! In the Before Times, an anti-trust action like this would also involve a many-year agreement by Google to an oversight committee composed of some engineers and business/economics people. Google would be forced to listen to the panel and enable any follow-ups. The “or else” was typically so astronomical it would be business-ending.
But that was back when we had the rule of law.
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It's a gimmick to get publicity. But if it happens, the company has to generate revenue to pay it off.
Guess how browser makers make money off a 'free' product?
Especially AI companies
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That typically happens when the seller actually wants to sell though.
Why do you think anti trust rulings couldn't contain the same limitation? Other than the govt being for sale to the highest bidder, but if Google could influence that the ruling wouldn't happen in the first place.