When it comes to disclosing sponsors, your Google
Assistant may be mute
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[April 01, 2019]
By Paresh Dave
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - On stage at an
investor conference last month, Google's Chief Business Officer Philipp
Schindler identified a vexing challenge for the company's most prized
app: its virtual assistant.
Responding to user searches out loud through Google Assistant is not
ideal for generating revenue, Schindler suggested.
When results are visible, not merely oral, "you have room for
advertising, of course," said Schindler, whose company grosses an
estimated $70 billion annually through ads above search results.
The Alphabet Inc company declined to elaborate on Schindler's remarks.
But Google's conundrum is one facing several big tech companies whose
users increasingly seek help from voice-enabled speakers and gadgets:
how to deliver greater convenience while still generating the ad revenue
that traditionally has funded free searches.
The question is most acute for Google, which holds the world's biggest
search advertising business.
So far, consumers generally get a brief answer from virtual assistants
without the disturbance of ads. And tech companies have not shown how
they would include the "Sponsored" or "Ad" disclaimers that regulators
in the United States and elsewhere require with paid-for search results.
One Google Assistant feature already is close to violating disclosure
rules, according to five advertising attorneys contacted by Reuters.
Google contends it is in compliance.
The feature recommends plumbers and other local home service providers
without disclosing that the results draw from a curated database mainly
composed of companies that joined a Google marketing program.
"It's not a completely clean recommendation," said Michelle Cohen, an
attorney with expertise in marketing rules at Ifrah Law in Washington,
D.C. "If there's a financial commitment, you're supposed to disclose
it."
Conversing with assistants is routine for millions of people globally,
whether on bedside alarm clocks, car audio systems or even high-end
headphones. More than 1 billion such devices have Google Assistant, 100
million Amazon.com Inc's Alexa and at least 1 billion Apple Inc's Siri,
according to the companies and estimates.
Regulators avoid stifling new technologies, said Richard Lawson, partner
at Manatt, Phelps & Phillips and former consumer protection director in
Florida's attorney general’s office. But he said, authorities will still
ask, "How do you convey meaningful disclosures?"
At the conference, Schindler said ads on Google Assistant would be more
"interesting" when responses are shown on a nearby screen, like a TV,
smartphone, laptop or smart speaker with a display.
"Then we're exactly in the world that we deeply understand," Schindler
said, with moneymaking options "very similar" to traditional search.
NEW SEARCH TECHNOLOGIES
The Federal Trade Commission, which regulates deceptive business
practices in the United States, has long required search engines to
inform users in a "noticeable and understandable" fashion when results
are connected to financial relationships. That is why consumers see "Ad"
or "Sponsored" labels next to the first few Google results on screens.
New search services that "talk" to consumers are not exempt from "the
long-standing principle of making advertising distinguishable," the FTC
said in letters to Google and other companies in 2013.
Consumers often complain to the commission about potential violations,
and it prods companies into changing practices by threatening fines if
the issues persist.
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Google Home smart speakers, which respond to consumer's voice
commands to control devices in the home or to answer questions out
loud about topics including the weather, news or local services, in
shown in San Francisco, California, U.S., March 28, 2019. Picture
taken March 28, 2019. REUTERS/Dave Paresh
The FTC has not received complaints about ads on Google Assistant, according to
results from a Freedom of Information Act request. And the agency declined to
comment on whether it is scrutinizing any virtual assistants, though last year
it charged a small search engine for prospective college students that included
paid results without warning.
GOOGLE'S CHALLENGE
Google users have come to expect results from any relevant source on the web,
except when using specialized tools like Google News or Google Flights that have
a narrowed set of sources.
In 2017, Google Assistant adopted a specialty tool, Local Services, which offers
only vetted businesses when U.S. users search for domestic help such as plumbers
and locksmiths.
Results come from a marketing program, known as Google Guarantee, in which
members are licensed, insured and clear of legal issues, according to Google. It
refunds consumers up to $2,000 if members botch a job.
Membership is free, but businesses need it to buy Local Services search ads from
Google. And guaranteed businesses largely do buy those for queries like
"plumber," Reuters found.
Google gets paid when users contact providers through the ads, which are labeled
"Sponsored" on Google.com.
But when Google Assistant responds to "plumber" queries with the same "Google
Guaranteed" options, the assistant does not offer any disclaimer or further
explanation.
Google said in a statement that the results are not labeled as ads "because
Google isn't paid for these results" when delivered on the Assistant rather than
Google.com.
The advertising attorneys said users should be informed that Google Assistant
results, even if not paid for, stem from a filtered database in which many
businesses landed because they wanted to buy ads.
"Disclosing 'many of the recommended providers may participate in our referral
network'...would be relevant and appropriate," said Cohen, the Washington, D.C.,
attorney.
In some cities, Google Assistant includes businesses vetted by partner search
services HomeAdvisor and Porch. It does not mention that those services charge
some businesses for customer leads.
Disclaimers vary in other types of searches, depending on how they are
delivered. Google.com answers "flight to Los Angeles" with upcoming flights
labeled as "Sponsored," and users who click on the label would learn that Google
"may be compensated" by some of its data sources.
But Google Assistant's "Sponsored" label does not link to additional
information. On smart speakers, the assistant reads only the lowest price
without naming an airline.
It says nothing about sponsors.
(Reporting by Paresh Dave; Editing by Greg Mitchell, Marla Dickerson and Julie
Marquis)
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