By Greg Bensinger
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) — In federal court on Tuesday, Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) CEO Sundar Pichai acknowledged that he sometimes marked documents as «privileged» and never turned off a setting that caused internal chats to automatically delete after one day.
Pichai was in court in San Francisco to defend Alphabet's Google from a lawsuit by Epic Games that alleges its app store policies amount to an illegal monopoly and have caused consumers to pay artificially high prices.
Attorneys for Epic Games, maker of the wildly popular «Fortnite» game, appeared to be trying to establish that Pichai and Google were concealing sensitive communications that could later be used against it in a potential trial.
Jurors were shown an internal Google document reminding employees that «anything you write can become subject to review in legal discovery» as well as one of Pichai's chat histories where he requested that history be turned off, meaning messages would be erased.
“I supported all recommendations from our legal and compliance team,” Pichai said during roughly an hour of testimony led by Epic's lawyer. He largely stuck to one-word answers but was occasionally admonished by Epic Games' attorney for straying beyond simple answers.
Pichai, in examination by a Google attorney, denied he had ever tried to keep any document hidden from a lawsuit. He said he used the term «privileged» on documents to indicate «confidential» not necessarily subject to attorney-client privilege.
Epic Games has alleged in its lawsuit that app store policies amount to an illegal monopoly and have caused consumers to pay artificially high prices. The company wants it to be easier for Google Play users to access third-party app stores and
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