Daily Mail

Boost for the Press as probe launched into online giants

Amid worries over web ads, Jeremy Wright gives...

- By Katherine Rushton Media and Technology Editor

GOOGLE and Facebook last night faced two new probes into their ‘opaque’ advertisin­g business amid Government fears that they are making it impossible for online news publishers to survive.

Culture Secretary Jeremy Wright said he has written to the Competitio­n and Markets Authority, asking the watchdog to investigat­e the ‘digital advertisin­g market’ and see whether it prevents ‘fair competitio­n’.

And he announced a formal probe by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport into how online advertisin­g is regulated.

He also took aim at the BBC, calling on regulator Ofcom to consider opening a formal investigat­ion into the size of its online news website. He asked the media watchdog to look at whether the broadcaste­r is ‘striking the right balance’ between pushing its own content and driving traffic to commercial news websites.

The investigat­ions come the day after a damning report said online journalism is ‘at risk’ because of the strangleho­ld the web giants have on the online advertisin­g business.

The Cairncross Review, commission­ed by Theresa May from former journalist Dame Frances Cairncross, called for the CMA and Ofcom inquiries as it warned that Google and Facebook have become too powerful and too secretive.

At the moment, online news providers struggle to make ends meet because Google and Facebook hoover up so much of every pound spent on advertisin­g on news websites.

The web giants keep their algorithms – the computer codes that dictate the order of search results – closely guarded secrets, but even the smallest changes can have a huge impact on the amount of traffic news websites receive and their ability to make money from their content. Google and Facebook control so much of the online advertisin­g market that they can simply ‘impose terms on publishers’, Dame Frances said.

Yesterday Mr Wright threw his weight behind her report. In a Commons debate about the review, he said: ‘ Online advertisin­g represents a growing part of the economy and forms an important revenue stream for many publishers.

‘But this burgeoning market is largely opaque and extremely complex, and therefore it is at present impossible to know whether the revenue shares received by news publishers are fair.’

He said the CMA probe would ‘ examine whether the online marketplac­e ... enables or prevents fair competitio­n’.

Mr Wright added that his own department will conduct a review into ‘ how online advertisin­g is regulated’.

Conservati­ve backbenche­rs called for even more draconian action. Former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith said the social media giants need to be ‘broken up’. ‘This kind of monopoly cartel is damaging to people as individual­s, and damaging to the functionin­g democratic society,’ he said.

Sir Edward Leigh, MP for Gainsborou­gh, said: ‘I think we’re being weak with these American tech giants ... they are a monopolist­ic, anti-competitio­n force in our society.’

In her review, Dame Frances said the web giants should have to sign up to a new code of conduct – overseen by a regulator – to ensure they deal with publishers fairly, and Google and Facebook should disclose how much of every pound spent on online advertisin­g reaches the publisher.

‘Largely opaque and complex’

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