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In Antitrust Trial, Google Argues That Smart Employees Explain Its Success

In Antitrust Trial, Google Argues That Smart Employees Explain Its Success
In Antitrust Trial, Google Argues That Smart Employees Explain Its Success


In its antitrust confrontation with the government, the pillar of Google’s defense has been that innovation — not restrictive contracts, backed by billions in payments to industry partners — explains its success as the giant of internet search.

Its competitive advantage, it says, is brilliant people, working tirelessly to improve its products.

Pandu Nayak, Google’s first witness in the antitrust trial that began last month, is the face of that defense.

Mr. Nayak, a vice president of search, was raised in India and graduated at the top of his class at one of that nation’s elite technical schools. He came to America, earned his Ph.D. in computer science at Stanford University and then spent seven years as a research scientist on artificial intelligence projects at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley.

Nineteen years ago, Mr. Nayak joined Google and found a particularly welcoming workplace, filled with professional friends. “At the end of the day, Google is a technology company — it really values the skills that I have,” Mr. Nayak said in his testimony on Wednesday.

The computer scientist’s testimony is an attempt to rebut a central argument in the case filed by the Justice Department and 38 states and territories. Their suit claims that scale is essential to competition in search. That is, the more data from user queries a search engine collects, the more it learns to improve its service, which attracts still more users, advertisers and ad revenue. That flywheel, the suit says, is fueled by ever-increasing volumes of user data.

The government and states claim that Google locks in a huge data advantage through exclusive contracts and payments of more than $10 billion a year to Apple, Samsung and others to be the default search engine on smartphones and personal computer browsers.

A slender man with thinning gray hair, who spoke in clipped, slightly accented English, Mr. Nayak has a professorial air, and has taught graduate courses at Stanford. Much of his testimony was essentially a tutorial in search technology and its evolution, guided by a Google lawyer, Kenneth Smurzynski.

Mr. Nayak went through the long string of research advances at Google that have improved search quality, including developments in machine learning, deep learning, transformers and large language models — the technology behind A.I.-driven chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Bard.

The evolution Mr. Nayak traced was one in which innovations in language understanding have become increasingly important to gains in search quality, while the sheer volume of search queries has become less important.

At one point, Mr. Nayak cited a change where using a third less data brought “no meaningful decline in search quality.” Clever software, he suggested, matters more than more data.

In testimony earlier this week, Michael Whinston, the Justice Department’s economic expert, estimated that Google’s exclusive deals blocked rivals from between a third and one half of all user search queries in the United States.

“The power of the defaults is very significant,” said Mr. Whinston, an economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Mr. Whinston based his analysis on internal documents provided by Google, Microsoft, DuckDuckGo and other search services to determine his estimate of “foreclosure rate” as a result of the Google contracts.

In his cross-examination, John Schmidtlein, Google’s lead lawyer, noted that exclusive contracts were common practice in the search business. But Mr. Whinston said the size of Google’s deals was striking.

“When you see Google paying billions and billions and billions, there has to be a reason,” he said. “That’s the first thing that, as an economist, slaps me in the face.”

In his testimony, Mr. Nayak discussed the investments Google has made in search, including amassing and constantly updating a vast index of the web, which includes hundreds of billions of documents, and employing an army of 16,000 human raters worldwide, who assess the relevance and reliability of search results.

Kenneth Dintzer, the Justice Department’s lead lawyer, pushed Mr. Nayak to concede that Google’s improvements in search depend on huge amounts of user data — far more than its nearest rival, Microsoft’s Bing.

Mr. Nayak acknowledged that data was crucial, but he stuck to Google’s line of defense. “Bigger is not necessarily better,” he said.

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