"Oyez" is used to mark the start of sessions in Judge Leonie Brinkema's courtroom. Judge Brinkema found Google guilty in April of illegally monopolizing the publisher ad server and ad exchange markets. The remedy phase begins Sept. 22 in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. The DOJ and Google filed witness and exhibit lists detailing evidence and intended testimony. The DOJ seeks remedies ranging from forced divestiture of Google's ad tech assets to bans on Google self‑preferencing its ad tech and services. The judge will assess remedies through witness testimony and evidence presentations. Google will present counterarguments and intends to appeal only after remedies conclude.
In the courtroom of Leonie Brinkema, the judge presiding over DOJ v. Google, the clerk uses this invocation to mark the start of each session. And a new session starts soon. The next step In April, Judge Brinkema found Google guilty of operating illegal monopolies over two online advertising markets: the publisher ad server market and the ad exchange market. The remedy phase of the trial will begin on Sept. 22 in the US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.
In the meantime, just last week, the DOJ and Google filed their respective witness lists and the exhibit lists itemizing the evidence that lawyers for each side intend to present in court. The DOJ is seeking punishments that run the gamut from a forced divestiture of Google's ad tech assets to putting a ban on Google self-preferencing its own ad tech and services. The judge will evaluate the DOJ's proposals through witness testimony and presentations of evidence. Google lawyers will, of course, present their counterarguments.
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