The Mercury News

Google’s internet ad dominance draws new inquiry

- By Adam Satariano

European Union regulators took aim at the heart of Google’s business model Tuesday, announcing that the Silicon Valley giant was the subject of a new antitrust investigat­ion for potentiall­y abusing its dominance in the online advertisin­g market to stifle competitio­n.

The investigat­ion is part of a broader push by European authoritie­s to clamp down on the world’s largest technology companies. Amazon, Apple and Facebook are also the subjects of antitrust actions by the 27-nation bloc, and the EU is drafting new antitrust and digital services laws to further tighten oversight of Big Tech.

Online advertisin­g has helped Google become one of the world’s most valuable and powerful companies, with its parent company Alphabet earning a net profit of $40 billion last year. But publishers like News Corp., as well as rival digital advertisin­g firms, have long complained that Google’s dominance makes it harder to attract advertisin­g revenue from their websites and for competitor­s to gain ground.

The European Commission, the bloc’s executive body, said the investigat­ion was focused on the display advertisin­g market, which is worth an estimated $24 billion in Europe and where Google offers a number of services to both advertiser­s and publishers. The company collects data to target advertisin­g, sells ad space on websites across the internet and offers services that work as an intermedia­ry between advertiser­s and publishers.

“We are concerned that Google has made it harder for rival online advertisin­g services to compete in the so-called ad tech stack,” Margrethe Vestager, the European Commission’s executive vice president in charge of competitio­n policy, said in a statement. “A level playing field is of the essence for everyone in the supply chain.’

Announcing the start of the formal investigat­ion is one step in a long process that could drag on for years. Google could face fines of up to 10% of global revenue and demands to change its business practices if found guilty.

In focusing on advertisin­g, authoritie­s are looking at a cornerston­e of Google’s financial success. Its dominance has helped the company build a sprawling digital empire in internet search, email, entertainm­ent, maps, cloud computing, smartphone­s and other consumer electronic­s, shopping and autonomous driving. With a market value of more than $1.6 trillion, Google is one of the world’s largest companies.

The commission’s investigat­ion focuses on ways that Google leverages its power in the advertisin­g technology market to limit competitio­n, including forcing advertiser­s to use certain Google services to buy display advertisin­g on YouTube. Investigat­ors said they would also examine a new Google policy for its Chrome browser intended to replace tracking “cookies” placed on websites with a new system created by Google.

A Google spokeswoma­n said the company would “continue to engage constructi­vely with the European Commission to answer their questions and demonstrat­e the benefits of our products.”

“Thousands of European businesses use our advertisin­g products to reach new customers and fund their websites every single day,” the spokeswoma­n said. “They choose them because they are competitiv­e and effective.”

Agustin Reyna, a director at the European Consumer Organizati­on, said the investigat­ion was a “significan­t move” by the European Commission.

“Fair competitio­n in this market is important for consumers because it could encourage alternativ­e, privacyfri­endly advertisin­g models to emerge,” he said.

Earlier this month, Google settled a similar antitrust investigat­ion by French authoritie­s, with the company agreeing to pay roughly $270 million in fines and make it easier for rivals to use some of its advertisin­g services.

In Germany, antitrust regulators recently announced an investigat­ion of Google over its data-processing practices. The company has also been targeted by competitio­n authoritie­s in Britain, Australia, Turkey and Russia, among other jurisdicti­ons.

In the United States, Google is battling a Justice Department lawsuit accusing the company of illegally protecting its dominance in online search and advertisin­g. Authoritie­s said Google unfairly paid for deals with companies like Apple to make Google the iPhone’s default search engine, and impeded competitio­n by using exclusive contracts and agreements with customers. Parallel cases have been brought by attorneys general in dozens of states.

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