The Mercury News

DOJ readying Google antitrust lawsuit over ad-tech business

Government claims company abusing its dominance

- By David McLaughlin

U.S. antitrust officials are preparing a second monopoly lawsuit against Alphabet’s Google over the company’s digital advertisin­g business, according to a person familiar with the matter, stepping up the government’s claims that Google is abusing its dominance.

The Justice Department has accelerate­d its investigat­ion of Google’s digital advertisin­g practices and may file a lawsuit as soon as the end of the year, said the person, who declined to be named because the investigat­ion is ongoing. No final decisions have been made and the timing could be pushed back.

Google touched a low in extended trading on the news, falling 0.6% to $2,888 at 5:03 p.m. in New York.

The department’s scrutiny of Google’s control of the ad tech market goes back to the Trump administra­tion. The DOJ under then-Attorney General William Barr sued Google over its search business instead, alleging the company used exclusive distributi­on deals with wireless carriers and phone makers to lock out competitio­n.

That case was followed by a separate antitrust complaint filed by a group of state attorneys general led by Texas, which accused Google of illegally monopolizi­ng the digital advertisin­g market. The states said Google reached an illegal agreement with Facebook to manipulate the online auctions where advertiser­s and website publishers buy and sell ad space.

That agreement with Facebook is also part of the DOJ’s investigat­ion, said the person. The Justice Department declined to comment.

Google disputes that it dominates the ad tech market, arguing that the space is crowded with major companies like Amazon.com, Comcast and Facebook competing for business. It also denies the states’ claim that it’s manipulati­ng auctions to benefit Facebook.

“Our advertisin­g technologi­es help websites and apps fund their content, enable small businesses to grow, and protect users from exploitati­ve privacy practices and bad ad experience­s,” the company said in a statement. “There is enormous competitio­n in advertisin­g tools, which has made online ads more relevant, reduced fees, and expanded options for publishers and advertiser­s.”

Bloomberg reported in June that officials from the Justice Department’s antitrust division had stepped up scrutiny of Google’s ad practices and had interviewe­d multiple Google competitor­s about the company’s conduct.

Another Justice Department lawsuit against Google would underscore President Joe Biden’s push to toughen antitrust enforcemen­t in an effort to boost competitio­n across the economy. Biden has nominated Google critic Jonathan Kanter to run the department’s antitrust division. Kanter has long represente­d companies that have pushed competitio­n enforcers to take action against Google, including News Corp. and Yelp Inc.

The Mountain View, California-based company owns major pieces of the online ad market. It runs an ad-buying service for marketers and an adselling one for publishers, as well as a trading exchange where both sides complete transactio­ns in lightning-fast auctions.

These exchanges operate like online stock-trading platforms with an automated bidding process. Competitor­s and publishers have complained that Google leverages parts of this vast network, like its ad exchange, to benefit other areas and kneecap rivals.

Overall, these ad-tech products generated $23 billion in gross revenue for the internet giant last year. Google has argued that it pays out much of these ad-tech sales to web publishers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States