原译:Pseudo-original: The scale of antitrust lawsuits faced by Google's search business has been reduced. In a ruling announced on Friday local time, US District Judge Amit Mehta found that state attorneys general failed to prove that Google's search results were intended to harm competitors such as Yelp and Expedia. At the same time, Mehta upheld the US Department of Justice's charges against the company's default search engine agreements with Apple, Mozilla, and smartphone manufacturers, claiming that these agreements harmed competition. The case will go to trial on September 12, with the focus now on the default search engine agreements. The plaintiffs claim that these agreements prevent competitors such as Microsoft's Bing from obtaining the scale needed to compete with Google, a violation of antitrust laws.改译:Google's search business faces a smaller scale of antitrust lawsuits. In a ruling announced on Friday, US District Judge Amit Mehta held that state attorneys general could not prove that Google's search results were aimed at harming competitors like Yelp and Expedia. However, Mehta upheld the US Department of Justice's claims that Google's default search engine agreements with Apple, Mozilla, and smartphone manufacturers were detrimental to competition. The case, which will go to trial on September 12, now focuses on the default search engine agreements. The plaintiffs argue that these agreements prevent competitors, such as Microsoft's Bing, from gaining the necessary scale to compete with Google, a violation of antitrust laws.