The judge’s decision positions Google to keep its search business running largely without interruption.

In a landmark antitrust case, Judge Amit P. Mehta ruled on Tuesday that Google must hand over some of its search data to rivals but did not grant the government’s biggest requests.

Curbing Google is an overdue return to the government’s longtime role in encouraging competition among tech companies.

Google will have to give up search data to competitors but can keep its Chrome browser, a federal judge ruled in the landmark antitrust case.

Google’s penalty for being a search monopoly does not include selling Chrome.

The judge’s decision positions Google to keep its search business running largely without interruption.

A federal judge’s remedy stops short of making meaningful changes to how we use our phones, computers and the web.

The nuclear option for addressing the tech giant’s search dominance — a break-up — is off the table. That’s lifting Big Tech stocks.

A federal judge ordered steps in the search monopoly case that will restrain Google but not break it up, signaling a cautious antitrust approach by courts.