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Google’s power over ad technology probed by European Union

Google’s power over ad technology probed by European Union

Gulf Times
Tuesday, June 22, 2021 07:10:50 PM UTC

A cyclist passes the European headquarters building of Google Inc in Dublin. The European Commission said yesterday its new confrontation with the Alphabet Inc unit will focus on concerns the company may be illegally favouring its own online display advertising technologies, squeezing out rivals.

Google faces a sweeping European Union probe into its advertising technology, a move that strikes at the heart of the tech giant’s business model. The European Commission said yesterday its new confrontation with the Alphabet Inc unit will focus on concerns the company may be illegally favouring its own online display advertising technologies, squeezing out rivals. “This is probably the probe that many people were waiting for because it goes to the core of Google’s business,” said Aitor Ortiz, an analyst for Bloomberg Intelligence. The biggest risk would be an order for Google to separate from or restrict its online ads operations, which “could have a significant impact on the money generated through online advertising,” he added. It’s the first time the EU has directly examined the black-box of online advertising where Google automatically calculates and offers ad space and prices to advertisers and publishers as a user clicks on a web page. Earlier EU cases focused on shopping search ads, mobile phone ads and advertising contracts. The investigation will also check if Google unfairly blocks competitors’ access to user data and will scrutinise privacy changes to phase out some cookies and data access for advertisers. “We are concerned that Google has made it harder for rival online advertising services to compete,” Margrethe Vestager, the EU’s antitrust commissioner, said in the statement. “Online advertising services are at the heart of how Google and publishers monetise their online services.” The latest EU case has been brewing for months. Vestager signalled in March the regulator was working on a “very large” probe into Google. Regulators gathered information in January on Google’s practices in the “advertising technology value chain,” according to questionnaires sent to publishers and ad firms. Online advertising is a new front for antitrust enforcement. In France, Google agreed earlier this month to pay a fine and make some global changes to ad sales. The UK’s watchdog may oversee Google’s ad-tracking overhaul under concessions it’s considering. Google said in an e-mailed statement that European business choose its services “because they’re competitive and effective. The company will “continue to engage constructively with the European Commission to answer their questions and demonstrate the benefits of our products to European businesses and consumers.” The Google probe adds to a slew of global regulatory actions targeting the dominance of a handful of tech giants. The investigations often focus on how they may use access to data and platforms to suppress competition. Several US states and the Justice Department have sued technology companies in the last year on antitrust issues. The EU has escalated probes into Amazon.com Inc and Apple Inc and earlier this month announced an investigation into Facebook Inc The UK is also looking at Facebook and has wrung commitments from Google on its use of cookies. At the same time, the EU authority is trying to acquire new powers to investigate so-called Internet gatekeepers and forbid them from favouring their own products. The rules may be finalised early next year, a German lawmaker working on the report said on Monday. Digital advertising spending was around €20bn ($24bn) in the EU in 2019, the regulator said. EU fines are based on the value of sales and capped at 10% of yearly revenue. Google has previously been fined more than $9bn by the EU. Click here to read more about the EU concerns. Opening a probe raises the risks that the EU will slap the company with fines or order it to change its business model. But cases can take years to conclude and are sometimes dropped if regulators can’t back up their initial suspicions. Google’s antitrust problems in Europe aren’t over, with new rules and probes targeting the company’s dominant position in European and UK search and online-advertising markets, but the risks are manageable, in our view, Bloomberg Intelligence said.
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