The Guardian Australia

Google sued for $2.3bn by European media groups over digital ad losses

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Alphabet’s Google was hit with a €2.1bn ($2.3bn) lawsuit by 32 media groups including Axel Springer and Schibsted on Wednesday, alleging that they had suffered losses due to the company’s practices in digital advertisin­g.

The move by the groups – which include publishers in Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Hungary, Luxembourg, the Netherland­s, Norway, Poland, Spain and Sweden – comes as antitrust regulators also crack down on Google’s adtech business.

“The media companies involved have incurred losses due to a less competitiv­e market, which is a direct result of Google’s misconduct,” a statement issued by their lawyers, Geradin Partners and Stek, said.

“Without Google’s abuse of its dominant position, the media companies would have received significan­tly higher revenues from advertisin­g and paid lower fees for ad tech services. Crucially, these funds could have been reinvested into strengthen­ing the European media landscape,” the lawyers said.

They cited the French competitio­n authority’s €220m fine against Google on its ad-tech business in 2021, as well as the European Commission’s charges last year to buttress their group claim.

“If there is follow through to the regulatory scrutiny, Google may need to curtail its practices and provide more consistent, predicable pricing to its advertisin­g customers,” DA Davidson & Co analyst Gil Luria said.

The lawsuit comes at a time when Google’s core advertisin­g business is facing an existentia­l threat from the shift to generative AI chat, Luria added.

In a statement, a spokespers­on for Google said the company opposes the lawsuit, adding that it is “speculativ­e and opportunis­tic”.

“Google works constructi­vely with publishers across Europe. [Our advertisin­g tools] adapt and evolve in partnershi­p with those same publishers.“

Google last year said it disagreed with EU antitrust charges against its ad tech business where it is involved in both the buy-side as well as the sell-side of the supply chain.

Publishers around the world have in recent years lamented Big Tech’s increasing dominance in advertisin­g as their share of revenues fall. Google is the most dominant digital advertisin­g platform in the world, according to analysts.

The group said they filed the lawsuit in a Dutch court because of the country’s reputation as a key jurisdicti­on for antitrust damages claims in Europe, and to avoid multiple claims in different European countries.

Others in the group include Austria’s Krone, Belgian groups DPG Media and Mediahuis, Denmark’s TV2 Danmark A/S, Finland’s Sanoma, Poland’s Agora, Spain’s Prensa Iberica and Switzerlan­d’s Ringier.

 ?? Photograph: Steve Marcus/Reuters ?? Google dismissed the lawsuit as ‘speculativ­e and opportunis­tic’.
Photograph: Steve Marcus/Reuters Google dismissed the lawsuit as ‘speculativ­e and opportunis­tic’.

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