The Telegram (St. John's)

Jedi Blue ad deal probed by EU, Britain

- FOO YUN CHEE PAUL SANDLE

European Union and British antitrust authoritie­s launched parallel investigat­ions on Friday into a 2018 online display advertisin­g deal between Google and Facebook, adding to a long list of regulatory challenges facing the U.S. tech giants.

Alphabet unit Google and Facebook, whose parent company is now called Meta, defended the Jedi Blue deal, which the EU said may thwart ad tech rivals and disadvanta­ge publishers in online display advertisin­g.

So-called header bidding allows publishers, such as news providers, to offer ad space to multiple ad exchanges and networks simultaneo­usly, potentiall­y generating more ad revenue.

The Jedi Blue agreement enables Meta via its Meta Audience Network, to participat­e in Google’s Open Bidding program, which is a rival to header bidding.

“A competing technology to Google’s Open Bidding may have been targeted with the aim to weaken it and exclude it from the market for displaying ads on publisher websites and apps,” EU antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager said in a statement.

While one angle of the EU investigat­ion focuses on the deal, another looks at whether Google abuses its dominance which could mean that Facebook is off the hook if this is found to be the case.

“This is a publicly documented, pro-competitiv­e agreement that enables Facebook Audience Network (FAN) to participat­e in our Open Bidding program, along with dozens of other companies,” Google said in response to the investigat­ions.

“Meta’s non-exclusive bidding agreement with Google and the similar agreements we have with other bidding platforms, have helped to increase competitio­n for ad placements,” Meta said in a statement.

Google, which has already been hit by more than eight billion euros (US$8.8 billion) in EU antitrust fines in the past decade, and Facebook are both being investigat­ed by the bloc’s executive over other issues and could face fines as much as 10 per cent of their global turnover for breaching its rules.

Britain’s antitrust authority is also investigat­ing the deal and the EU competitio­n watchdog said it intends to cooperate closely with its British counterpar­t.

Texas and 15 other U.S. states alleged in an antitrust complaint against Google that the deal with Facebook was struck as part of its effort to counter header bidding, which publishers wanted to use to make more money from advertisin­g on their websites.

 ?? DADO RUVIC • REUTERS ?? Youtube has now blocked access to Russian state-backed channels around the world.
DADO RUVIC • REUTERS Youtube has now blocked access to Russian state-backed channels around the world.

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