For years, Google has faced complaints about how it dominates the online advertising market.
Many of the concerns stem from the internet giant’s suite of software known as Google Ad Manager, which websites around the world use to sell ads on their sites. The technology conducts split-second auctions to place ads each time a user loads a page.
The dominance of that technology has landed Google in federal court. On Monday, Judge Leonie Brinkema of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia will preside over the start of a trial in which the Department of Justice accuses the company of abusing control of its ad technology and violating antitrust law.
It would be Google’s second antitrust trial in less than a year. In August, a federal judge ruled in a separate case that Google had illegally maintained a monopoly in online search, a major victory for the Justice Department.
The new trial is the latest salvo by federal antitrust regulators against Big Tech, testing a century-old competition law against companies that have reshaped the way people shop, communicate and consume information. Federal regulators have also filed antitrust lawsuits against Apple, Amazon and Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, saying those companies have also abused their power.
The Justice Department declined to comment on its latest courtroom fight with Google.
Google’s vice president for regulatory affairs, Lee-Anne Mulholland, said in a blog post on Sunday that the Justice Department was “picking winners and losers in a highly competitive industry.”
“With the cost of ads going down and the number of ads sold going up, the market is working,” she said. “The DOJ’s case risks inefficiencies and higher prices — the last thing that America’s economy or our small businesses need right now.”
Google’s other antitrust case is also moving forward. On Friday, Judge Amit P. Mehta of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia set a timeline for deciding remedies by next August. The Justice Department has considered asking for a breakup of the company.
The financial impact of the Google trial that starts on Monday would not be as significant as the suit targeting the company’s core search business, which accounts for about 57 percent of Google’s revenue.
But the new suit could still reshape the internet giant and change the way many online ad businesses operate. The government is pre-emptively calling for a breakup of Google’s ad tech business. That includes divesting advertising software developed by DoubleClick, a company that Google acquired for $3.1 billion in 2008.
Google wrapped DoubleClick’s technology into a suite of products that are used for ad transactions around the web. Today, Google’s ad-selling tools for publishers control 87 percent of the U.S. market, the government says. The Justice Department says that overall, Google’s technology for selling ads across the web brought in about $31.7 billion in 2021. That portion of its business contributes only a small fraction of the company’s profits.
The Justice Department is expected to argue that Google’s dominance over placing ads online results in higher prices for advertisers and publishers. Google’s tool has also hurt specific industries, like news publishers, the government says. Google takes a portion of the price each time those publishers sell their ad space, making it harder for them to stay in business, the government argues.
“Ad tech issues raise the most important antitrust issues involving Google,” in part because they evoke the prospect of a breakup of the company, said Doug Melamed, a former acting assistant attorney general for the Justice Department’s antitrust division.
A government win could require the sale of DoubleClick and other ad tech acquisitions, forcing Google to change its behavior when selling ads online.
Cleaving the DoubleClick technology away from Google could have broad implications for the online advertising industry because it is so widely used by publishers, even if it is no longer the centerpiece of Google’s ad business.
William Kovacic, a former chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, said doing so would be “very directly changing an industry structure that’s made them enormously powerful” because web advertising is the foundation of the entire modern, free internet.
“Everything that’s not behind a paywall is free to the reader,” said Roger Alford, a law professor at the University of Notre Dame, “but it costs the publishers of the websites, and the advertisers of those websites, significant amounts of money in order to present their product for free.” Mr. Alford is a consultant on a similar lawsuit filed against Google and led by the attorney general in Texas.
Google plans to argue that it has been successful simply because it has the best advertising system in the face of substantial competition. The company said in a court filing in August that it had an “extraordinarily sophisticated” system of technology updating constantly to respond to a shifting advertising world.
“Millions of small, medium and large businesses choose Google’s ad tech ecosystem because it works,” the company said in the filing.
Google also said the Justice Department’s case was too narrowly focused on web page ads, an older segment of the market that has since expanded to social media, apps and other types of digital media that offer a wide variety of ways to advertise often outside Google’s control.
As the case plays out over the next few weeks, testimony is expected from representatives of news publishers, including News Corp, Vox Media and The New York Times Company, in the form of recorded depositions.
Daniel Francis, an assistant professor at New York University’s law school who previously served at the F.T.C., said the trial was a “ huge bellwether” because it concerned practices across the tech industry.
Antitrust experts said the case could help the Justice Department test legal arguments that it planned to use in future antitrust cases, including against Apple, which it has accused of making it difficult for customers to leave its tightly woven world of devices. The claims that Google built its dominance through acquisitions echo the case the F.T.C. brought against Meta, Facebook’s parent company, which the government says bought nascent rivals to snuff out competition.
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