Dubai Telegraph - Google fights breakup of ad tech business in US court

EUR -
AED 4.189524
AFN 72.441511
ALL 93.968011
AMD 419.639103
ANG 2.042464
AOA 1046.665875
ARS 1692.916706
AUD 1.65529
AWG 2.056264
AZN 1.941649
BAM 1.955525
BBD 2.296217
BDT 140.460232
BGN 1.92893
BHD 0.429845
BIF 3392.767129
BMD 1.140784
BND 1.475812
BOB 7.894889
BRL 5.905889
BSD 1.140055
BTN 107.859348
BWP 15.450758
BYN 3.342115
BYR 22359.375249
BZD 2.292818
CAD 1.621796
CDF 2583.87687
CHF 0.923003
CLF 0.026727
CLP 1051.883409
CNY 7.750432
CNH 7.754271
COP 3914.271018
CRC 519.833676
CUC 1.140784
CUP 30.230788
CVE 110.249001
CZK 24.269848
DJF 203.013208
DKK 7.474619
DOP 67.961329
DZD 152.051916
EGP 56.037274
ERN 17.111767
ETB 182.477619
FJD 2.563628
FKP 0.860882
GBP 0.861701
GEL 3.011577
GGP 0.860882
GHS 12.905184
GIP 0.860882
GMD 83.844335
GNF 9993.724937
GTQ 8.697738
GYD 238.466439
HKD 8.948302
HNL 30.505573
HRK 7.535565
HTG 149.060982
HUF 356.164055
IDR 20477.080904
ILS 3.399595
IMP 0.860882
INR 107.972682
IQD 1493.515994
IRR 1569719.404867
ISK 143.795754
JEP 0.860882
JMD 179.623933
JOD 0.808804
JPY 185.656401
KES 147.720606
KGS 99.761982
KHR 4588.414581
KMF 492.818954
KPW 1026.706406
KRW 1775.284607
KWD 0.353358
KYD 0.950083
KZT 546.315087
LAK 25569.961766
LBP 102088.985038
LKR 383.062732
LRD 206.909974
LSL 18.657583
LTL 3.36844
LVL 0.69005
LYD 7.324066
MAD 10.714292
MDL 20.144606
MGA 4836.298165
MKD 61.657942
MMK 2395.062648
MNT 4086.357424
MOP 9.209065
MRU 45.556188
MUR 53.890463
MVR 17.63628
MWK 1976.813129
MXN 19.993847
MYR 4.668658
MZN 72.839032
NAD 18.657583
NGN 1574.465419
NIO 41.954647
NOK 11.32759
NPR 172.577981
NZD 2.012806
OMR 0.438632
PAB 1.140035
PEN 3.896403
PGK 5.007361
PHP 70.336775
PKR 317.017153
PLN 4.300559
PYG 6933.085046
QAR 4.167195
RON 5.239737
RSD 117.344502
RUB 89.777831
RWF 1671.057499
SAR 4.279654
SBD 9.200473
SCR 15.261802
SDG 685.03566
SEK 11.092948
SGD 1.478166
SHP 0.851711
SLE 28.292655
SLL 23921.683736
SOS 651.505455
SRD 42.784553
STD 23611.934911
STN 24.496875
SVC 9.975771
SYP 126.093298
SZL 18.65462
THB 37.978975
TJS 10.533771
TMT 4.004153
TND 3.37871
TOP 2.746736
TRY 53.244064
TTD 7.738081
TWD 36.328852
TZS 2994.556899
UAH 51.090586
UGX 4178.41195
USD 1.140784
UYU 45.763359
UZS 13686.253821
VES 709.845732
VND 30023.165194
VUV 136.840574
WST 3.172453
XAF 655.861823
XAG 0.019706
XAU 0.000286
XCD 3.083027
XCG 2.054647
XDR 0.815682
XOF 655.87332
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.188083
ZAR 18.723867
ZMK 10268.427461
ZMW 20.549468
ZWL 367.332128
  • CMSC

    -0.0528

    21.64

    -0.24%

  • RBGPF

    0.6100

    65.61

    +0.93%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    21.9

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.7100

    19.1

    +3.72%

  • NGG

    -0.8900

    82.87

    -1.07%

  • GSK

    -0.3900

    52.42

    -0.74%

  • BCE

    -0.7500

    21.51

    -3.49%

  • RELX

    0.3800

    31.67

    +1.2%

  • RIO

    0.6400

    94.93

    +0.67%

  • BTI

    -0.9800

    61.76

    -1.59%

  • BCC

    -1.6300

    77.63

    -2.1%

  • BP

    -0.4000

    36.95

    -1.08%

  • VOD

    -0.4650

    13.225

    -3.52%

  • AZN

    -1.3300

    189.62

    -0.7%

  • JRI

    0.1000

    12.96

    +0.77%

Google fights breakup of ad tech business in US court
Google fights breakup of ad tech business in US court / Photo: Josh Edelson - AFP/File

Google fights breakup of ad tech business in US court

Google faced a fresh federal court test on Monday as US government lawyers asked a judge to order the breakup of the search engine giant's ad technology business.

Text size:

The lawsuit is Google's second such test this year after the California-based tech juggernaut saw a similar government demand to split up its empire rejected by a judge earlier this month.

Monday's case focuses specifically on Google's ad tech "stack" -- the tools that website publishers use to sell ads and that advertisers use to buy them.

In a landmark decision earlier this year, Federal Judge Leonie Brinkema agreed with the US Department of Justice (DOJ) that Google maintained an illegal grip on this market.

This week's trial is set to determine what penalties and changes Google must implement to undo its monopoly.

For the US government, Google should be ordered to spin off a piece of its ad tech operations, commit to changing its business practices and undergo close court supervision for the coming years.

"The law requires the court to put its thumb on the scale" and end Google's "profound and persistent harms" to potential rivals, said DOJ lawyer Julia Tarver Wood in her opening arguments.

Specifically, the DOJ is asking that Google relinquish its dominating ad exchange operations, the software where publishers sell their ad inventory to advertisers and ad agencies through a real-time bidding auction system.

In her opening statement, Google's lawyer Karen Dunne called the DOJ's proposals "radical and reckless," a "swing for the fences" and said "caution was key" when Judge Brinkema made her decision on the fate of Google's ad tech business.

Dunne added that the government's fix was technically unfeasible, would be highly disruptive to the industry and would "fail as a practical matter."

She not surprisingly turned to the recent decision in the similar case involving Google's search business in which a different judge decided that splitting up the company's business would be "messy and highly risky."

Instead, Google was required to share data with rivals as part of its remedies and undergo some court-ruled oversight.

The US government had pushed for Chrome's divestment, arguing the browser serves as a crucial gateway to the internet that brings in a third of all Google web searches.

Google's Dunne said the same caution should apply, with a forced divestiture far too radical a step, as she set forth the company's commitments to change its business practices in order to satisfy the judge.

The DOJ insisted these fixes fell short of what was needed and would see the tech giant swiftly regain its monopoly over the sector.

In a similar case in Europe, the European Commission, the EU's antitrust enforcer, earlier this month fined Google 2.95 billion euros ($3.47 billion) over its control of the ad tech market.

Brussels ordered behavioral changes, drawing criticism that it was going easy on Google as it had previously indicated that a divestiture may be necessary.

This US trial is expected to last about a week, with a decision by Judge Brinkema not expected for months.

These cases are part of a broader bipartisan government campaign against the world's largest technology companies. The US currently has five pending antitrust cases against Silicon Valley's tech giants.

Y.Al-Shehhi--DT