The Asian Age

Google to change global ad practices after French fine

- MATHIEU ROSEMAIN JUNE 7

Google said it would make changes to its global advertisin­g business to ensure it did not abuse its dominance, bowing to antitrust pressure for the first time in a landmark settlement with French authoritie­s.

The deal with the French competitio­n watchdog could help rebalance the power over advertisin­g in favour of publishers, which held sway over the business in the pre-internet era but lost control with the rapid rise of Google and Facebook.

The settlement, which was announced on Monday and also saw Google fined 220 million euros ($268 million), is the first time the US tech giant has agreed to make changes to its huge advertisin­g business, which brings in the bulk of its revenue.

"The decision to sanction Google is of particular significan­ce because it's the first decision in the world focusing on the complex algorithmi­c auction processes on which the online ad business relies," said France's antitrust chief Isabelle de Silva.

The watchdog found that Google's ad management platform for large publishers Google Ad Manager favoured the company's own online ad marketplac­e, Google AdX, where publishers sell space to advertiser­s in real-time.

Ad Manager provided

AdX with strategic data such as the winning bidding prices, while AdX also enjoyed privileged access to requests made by advertiser­s via Google's ad services, the authority said.

AdX, in turn, exchanged data more smoothly with Ad Manager than it did with other advertisin­g management platforms, the watchdog added. Such platforms are crucial for publishers to manage and sell advertisin­g space.

Under the terms of the settlement, Google made commitment­s to improve the way Ad Manager services worked with rival ad servers and ad space sales platforms, the French watchdog said. Some changes would be implemente­d by the first quarter of 2022, it said, adding that Google would not appeal the decision.

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