Chrome could eventually be up for sale, if the US Department of Justice gets its way in the remedies trial for US v. Google. And there are already buyers lining up at Googleâs door.
Any potential sale might not happen for a very long time. The remedies trial is still ongoing, a decision in that trial isnât expected for quite awhile, and Google has already said it will appeal, which will definitely add more time to the process and could ultimately reverse a ruling where Google might have been forced to sell the browser.
But letâs say that Google does have to sell Chrome â who wants it? And why? Weâre getting some of those answers from the remedies trial.
Letâs start with the why: a browser is a great way to promote your own search engine. Especially a browser thatâs as widely used as Chrome. Google makes Chrome, so it obviously makes sense that Google also provides Google Search as its default way to search the web. Chrome is also the most widely used browser by a wide margin â it has an estimated two-thirds of browser market share â so that means that many, many, many more people are using Google Search instead of other search engines just because itâs the default there.
But the interest isnât just to push search â having a browser as big as Chrome gives companies a surface to push just about anything. Owning Chrome would let a company suddenly put products in front of four billion people. If youâre an upstart trying to get traction, thatâs unbeatable, especially if youâre an upstart like an AI company thatâs trying to replace the default â which, right now, is Google.
Here are the eager potential buyers â at least, that we know about:
Yahoo isnât the only company estimating a price in the eleven-digit range; Gabriel Weinberg, DuckDuckGoâs CEO, testified that Chrome could be worth, in a âback-of-the-envelopeâ estimate, up to $50 billion according to Bloomberg. So should a company get the opportunity to buy Chrome, it seems likely theyâre going to have to front a lot of money.
But that enormous investment could be worth it. Whoever buys Chrome would instantly own a platform with billions of users. And right now, at a moment when Google is looking vulnerable, losing its browser to a competitor would probably be a significant blow.
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