Botswana Guardian

US could sue Google over digital ads market in September

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The US justice department is preparing to sue Google as soon as September, according to people familiar with the matter, capping years of work to build a case that the Alphabet unit illegally dominates the digital advertisin­g market.

Lawyers with the department’s antitrust division are questionin­g publishers in another round of interviews to refresh facts and glean additional details for the complaint, said three people familiar with the conversati­ons who asked not to be named discussing an ongoing investigat­ion.

Some of the interviews have already taken place and others are scheduled in the coming weeks, two of the people said. They build on previous interrogat­ions conducted during an earlier stage of the long- running investigat­ion, the people said.

An ad tech complaint, which Bloomberg had reported was in the works last year, would mark the department’s second case against Google following the government’s 2020 lawsuit alleging the tech titan dominates the online search market in violation of antitrust laws.

Still undecided is whether prosecutor­s will file the case in federal court in Washington, where the search case is pending, or in New York, where state attorneys- general have their own antitrust case related to Google’s ad tech business, the people said.

The department declined to comment.

“Our advertisin­g technologi­es help websites and apps fund their content, and enable small businesses to reach customers around the world,” said Google spokespers­on Peter Schottenfe­ls. “The enormous competitio­n in online advertisin­g has made online ads more relevant, reduced ad tech fees, and expanded options for publishers and advertiser­s.”

The department’s ad tech probe is an example of the federal government’s push to rein in the largest US technology platforms after nearly a decade during which regulators took little to no action. The Federal Trade Commission has sued Meta Platforms seeking to force it to sell off Instagram and WhatsApp and is investigat­ing Amazon. com over its control of online retail.

Apple is also under investigat­ion by the justice department related to its tight control over the App Store. These types of probes are difficult, taking years to prepare and resolve as they wend their way from investigat­ion to litigation and appeals. Federal scrutiny of Google’s digital advertisin­g operations goes back to the Trump administra­tion. Then- attorney- general William Barr sued the Mountain View, California- based company over its search business instead, alleging the company used exclusive distributi­on deals with wireless carriers and phone makers to lock out competitio­n.

In December 2020, attorneys- general for 16 states and Puerto Rico also sued Google for allegedly monopolisi­ng the online digital advertisin­g market. The suit alleges Google reached an illegal deal with Meta to manipulate the online auctions where advertiser­s and website publishers buy and sell ad space. Meta isn’t accused of wrongdoing in the states’ lawsuit, though regulators in the UK and Europe have opened a probe into both companies over the agreement, nicknamed Jedi Blue.

Google denies the allegation­s and has asked a federal judge to dismiss the states’ complaint. A hearing on that request is scheduled for later this month.

The search giant is the biggest player in the market for online display ads, which help fund news, sports and entertainm­ent websites. The company owns tools that help websites sell ads, others that help advertiser­s buy space and the most widely used platform where online ad auctions take place.

Google controlled about 28.6percent of the $ 211.2bn in US digital ad spending in 2021, according to eMarketer, while Facebook made up 23.8percent and Amazon 11.6percent.

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