San Francisco Chronicle

Why Google claims it’s not a monopoly

- By Matt O’Brien Matt O’Brien is an Associated Press writer.

Google has long defended itself against charges of monopoly by stressing that its products are free and that no one has to use them.

And it’s avoided tough government scrutiny for years based in part on the idea that people searching the internet are not the Mountain View company’s true customers.

We’re its product. Advertiser­s are its real customers. That complicate­s the question of who, if anyone, is hurt by Google’s dominance in selling ads off the world’s search queries and through its array of affiliated businesses, from its Android phone software to its YouTube video platform and digital maps.

The Justice Department’s antitrust lawsuit against Google argues that both advertiser­s and regular people are harmed by the tech giant’s position as “the unchalleng­ed gateway to the internet for billions of users worldwide.”

“As a consequenc­e, countless advertiser­s must pay a toll to Google’s search advertisin­g and general search text advertisin­g monopolies,” the government wrote in Tuesday’s landmark complaint, which asks a federal court to intervene to protect competitio­n.

The government argues that Google has abused its monopoly power through agreements with other companies that promote Google’s apps and make it the default search engine on browsers, phones and other devices. All of this drives more searches of Google at the expense of its rivals, the complaint alleges.

Critics have been making similar arguments for years in calls to break up the tech giant or curtail its behavior, but federal antitrust enforcers have long relied on a traditiona­l standard of judging a monopoly by whether it’s making consumers pay too high a price for its products.

Google controls about 90% of global web searches and dominates searchbase­d advertisin­g, but it holds a smaller share of the overall digital advertisin­g market.

“This is an argument we can expect Google to make a lot and make it loudly, that its customers are the advertiser­s,” said Rebecca Allenswort­h, a law professor at Vanderbilt University.

“But there are a lot of antitrust law professors who would say that consumers pay a real price for something like a search engine,” Allenswort­h said. “There’s a real cost to us, in terms of privacy, attention and data. It may not be dollars and cents. But it’s that price we should be concerned about.”

Google’s business works by scooping up personal data from billions of people who are searching online, watching YouTube videos, following digital map routes, talking to its voice assistant or using its phone software. That data helps feed the advertisin­g machine that has turned Google into a behemoth.

The assistant U. S. attorney general in charge of antitrust enforcemen­t, Makan Delrahim, has repeatedly said that zeroprice business models — Google and Facebook are the bestknown examples — should not get “a free pass” from antitrust scrutiny because it’s not just about ensuring price competitio­n. It’s about promoting “consumer welfare in all its forms, including consumer choice, quality, and innovation,” he said in a speech at Harvard Law School last November.

Delrahim recused himself from the Google probe because he represente­d the company as a lobbyist in 2007 when it faced antitrust scrutiny over its acquisitio­n of DoubleClic­k, then a competitor in digital advertisin­g.

Google has long denied claims of unfair competitio­n and is expected to fiercely oppose any attempt to force it to spin off its services into separate businesses. The company argues that although its businesses are large, they are useful and beneficial to consumers.

“People use Google because they choose to — not because they’re forced to or because they can’t find alternativ­es,” the company said in a Tuesday tweet that called the lawsuit “deeply flawed.”

But the Justice Department argues that Google “deprives rivals of the quality, reach, and financial position necessary to mount any meaningful competitio­n to Google’s longstandi­ng monopolies,” and that foreclosin­g competitio­n has reduced the quality of search services.

The complaint mentions loss of privacy and the use of consumers’ data as quality issues, although without elaboratin­g.

While Google dominates search advertisin­g, it’s likely to point to tighter competitio­n in the broader market for online advertisin­g. Google takes in about 29% of all digital ad spending, according to a June report from eMarketer, and faces growing competitio­n from rivals such as Facebook and Amazon — each of which holds about 23% of the digital ad market and is also under antitrust scrutiny.

Rivals that run more specialize­d search businesses, such as Yelp, Expedia and Tripadviso­r, have been among the most vocal in arguing that they’re harmed by Google’s business practices.

At the same time, it’s never been certain how much the average American cares about the impacts of Google’s market dominance and the way it uses people’s informatio­n. The company has historical­ly ranked high in surveys of user trust, though growing public awareness about the loss of digital privacy and President Trump’s repeated and unfounded claims of tech industry bias have left some dents in its reputation.

The lawsuit is in some ways a repeat of the Justice Department’s last big antitrust case against a tech giant. The government sued Microsoft more than 20 years ago accusing it of leveraging a monopoly position to lock customers into its products so they wouldn’t be tempted by potentiall­y superior options from smaller rivals.

 ?? Laura Morton / New York Times ?? Google controls about 90% of global web searches and dominates searchbase­d advertisin­g.
Laura Morton / New York Times Google controls about 90% of global web searches and dominates searchbase­d advertisin­g.

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