Apple's 36% Cut: Revealing Google's Safari Search Revenue Deal

TL;DR Summary
Apple earns 36% of Google's revenue from searches conducted on the Safari browser on Apple devices, according to an economics expert testifying in the antitrust lawsuit against Google. The agreement between Apple and Google, which has been revised multiple times since 2002, has made it difficult for other search engines to compete. If Google loses the lawsuit, Apple may develop its own search engine using its existing search team.
- Apple Gets 36% of Google's Safari Search Revenue MacRumors
- Google witness accidentally blurts out that Apple gets 36% cut of Safari deal Ars Technica
- Apple Gets 36% of Google Revenue in Search Deal, Expert Says Bloomberg
- A Google witness let slip just how much it pays Apple for Safari search The Verge
- Google Witness Spills on Apple's Cut From Safari Search Revenue Gizmodo
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
0
Time Saved
6 min
vs 7 min read
Condensed
94%
1,202 → 69 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on MacRumors