Comment by kelnos
6 months ago
The goal or motivation is irrelevant; what they actually did and its potential effects are what matters.
I'm not sure why you seem to be having so much trouble with this concept. Google's majority-market-share browser gave their browser-based videoconferencing product a privilege and advantage that other browser-based videoconferencing products did not get.
That's it. You don't need to dig into their motivations or their intentions. It doesn't matter if it even "worked" or not; it is completely immaterial that Google is so incompetent that it can't even win when it has given itself the tools to play dirty.
Motivation is a basic concept in the legal world which goes a long way to deciding criminal cases, has an impact on civil cases and will certainly influence whether the DOJ brings a case and what the result is. It's also a basic concept used by humans.
Saying it is irrelevant shows a complete lack of understanding of the legal and regulatory environment in which businesses operate.
The motivation is relevant, and the motivation here doesn't look good.