# Google Chokes Meta's Gemini Access, Exposing Big Tech Cartel

> Source: <https://dissenter.com/tech/google-chokes-metas-gemini-access-exposing-big-tech-cartel>
> Published: 2026-06-28 10:02:15+00:00

Google is throttling Meta's access to its Gemini AI models, a move that reveals exactly how the Big Tech cartel plans to hoard the most powerful technology ever built and decide who gets to compete in the new economy.

The Financial Times reported that Google restricted Meta's use of Gemini AI due to what it called Meta's "exceptionally high demand" for the models. Several other Google clients have also been affected, though less severely. Meta has responded by telling staff to be more efficient with AI tokens—the units measuring AI usage—essentially rationing the resource. Reuters could not independently verify the report, and neither Google nor Meta returned requests for comment.

This isn't about server capacity. Google Cloud pulled in $20 billion in revenue in the first quarter alone. CEO Sundar Pichai admitted that computing power constraints prevented even higher growth, and the cloud unit's backlog nearly doubled quarter over quarter. Translation: Google has the demand, it has the revenue, and it's choosing to choke supply.

That's cartel behavior. When the gatekeepers of artificial intelligence decide which companies can scale and which get throttled, they're picking winners and losers in an economy that's supposed to be competitive. The founders didn't break up the East India Company just to watch Silicon Valley build a digital version of it.

The timing matters. Google and Meta both face mounting legal accountability for the harms their platforms cause. Two landmark jury verdicts hit Meta this year, and one struck Google, according to the Associated Press. Evidence in those cases revealed employees likening their own products to drugs and casinos. Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act has long shielded these companies from liability for user content, but plaintiffs are now piercing that armor by targeting deliberate design choices rather than posts. Matthew Bergman, head of the Social Media Victims Law Center, which represents more than 1,000 plaintiffs, put it plainly: "It is still a hurdle, but it is no longer a barrier."

So while families who lost children to social media harms fight for accountability in court, the same companies are quietly consolidating control over the next frontier. Google isn't just a search engine or a cloud provider—it's becoming the landlord of artificial intelligence, deciding who gets the keys and who gets locked out.

The companies themselves admit they're struggling to secure enough computing power to support growing demand, even as they spend billions on chips and data centers. That's not a capacity crisis. That's a leverage play. Scarcity in the hands of a few is power.

The question isn't whether Google has the right to manage its own infrastructure. It's whether any single corporation should hold that much sway over a technology that will reshape every industry, every job, and every public conversation in this country. The founders would have called this exactly what it is—a monopoly in the making—and they wouldn't have waited for the damage to become irreversible before acting.
