DOJ Is Preparing To Sue Google Over Ad Market As Soon As September (bloomberg.com) 21
According to Bloomberg, the Department of Justice is preparing to sue Google as soon as next month, "capping years of work to build a case that the Alphabet unit illegally dominates the digital advertising market." From the report: Lawyers with the DOJ's antitrust division are questioning publishers in another round of interviews to refresh facts and glean additional details for the complaint [...]. Some of the interviews have already taken place and others are scheduled in the coming weeks [...]. They build on previous interrogations conducted during an earlier stage of the long-running investigation [...].
An ad tech complaint, which Bloomberg had reported was in the works last year, would mark the DOJ's second case against Google following the government's 2020 lawsuit alleging the tech titan dominates the online search market in violation of antitrust laws. Still undecided is whether prosecutors will file the case in federal court in Washington, where the search case is pending, or in New York, where state attorneys general have their own antitrust case related to Google's ad tech business [...].
An ad tech complaint, which Bloomberg had reported was in the works last year, would mark the DOJ's second case against Google following the government's 2020 lawsuit alleging the tech titan dominates the online search market in violation of antitrust laws. Still undecided is whether prosecutors will file the case in federal court in Washington, where the search case is pending, or in New York, where state attorneys general have their own antitrust case related to Google's ad tech business [...].
The real question (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Is why in the flying fig did they approve all of googles acquisitions in the first place?
So that they can come after Google later, once there is significant wealth to plunder. Duh.
Police do the same thing with drug dealers. Let them operate for a while so there is a bigger payday when they finally do take action.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, pretty much. Many strongly conservatives also believe that is you are poor, you did it to yourself.
Re:The real question (Score:4, Informative)
The real question is why in the flying fig did they approve all of googles acquisitions in the first place? Did they think there would be a competitive ad market?
To be fair, most of Google's influential ad market acquisitions were over 15 years ago. DoubleClick, AdMob and YouTube were all bought from 2005-2007. Google's market share of online search was 37% in 2005 (Yahoo was 30% at the time). It was a competitive market at the time, and Yahoo was engaging in billions of ad market acquisitions at the time too. Google just did a better job with their acquisitions and business strategy overall.
Allowing Facebook's acquisitions of WhatsApp and Instagram are far more egregious (kind of like allowing Google to buy Yahoo or MSN in 2005), but I wouldn't say allowing Google's ad market acquisitions in the early 2000's were obviously anti-competitive.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Indeed. Looks like regulation is completely broken in the US.
Re: (Score:2)
More specifically, captured [wikipedia.org].
If the DoJ wins... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The US has traditionally split companies up that violate antitrust laws.
Re: (Score:2)
There are a number of options the federal government has at their disposal. Fining them is an option, but a very weak and ineffective one.
They could unwind acquisitions, such as forcing Google to sell Nest, Fitbit, or even YouTube. Those companies would likely be around 15-20% of Google's current market cap (almost all from YouTube).
They could force Google to sell off a certain percentage of assets. This allows the company to keep autonomy regarding which assets they keep. Perhaps give Google three years to
Why? (Score:3)
Re:Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
This lawsuit is a bit shakier than their 2020 lawsuit focused on online search. Google owns over 90% of the online search market, but only a third of the online ad market. Google is still the largest player in both though.
A company with 30% market share, whose closest competitor has 20% (Facebook), isn't what most people think of as an anti-competitive monopoly. Standard Oil, for instance, had 70% market share when the case which broke it up was filed.
Re: (Score:2)
Could also be for mobile advertising market - in which c