Google expert at antitrust trial says government underestimates
competition for online ad dollars
Send a link to a friend
[September 27, 2024] By
MATTHEW BARAKAT
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) — Federal regulators who say Google holds an
illegal monopoly over the technology that matches online advertisers to
publishers are vastly underestimating the competition the tech giant
faces, an expert hired by Google testified Thursday.
Mark Israel, an economist who prepared an expert report on Google's
behalf, said the government's claims that Google holds a monopoly over
advertising technology are improperly focused on a narrow market the
government defines as “open web display advertising,” essentially the
rectangular ads that appear on the top and along the right hand side of
a web page when a consumer browses the web on a desktop computer.
But the government's case fails to account for a variety of competition
that occurs beyond those rectangular boxes, Israel said. In the real
world, advertisers have dramatically shifted where they spend money to
social media companies like Facebook and TikTok, and online retailers
like Amazon.
When you account for all online display advertising, not just the narrow
segment defined by the government's case, Google gets just 10% of the
U.S. market share as of 2022, he said. That's down from roughly 15% a
decade ago.
In addition, advertisers have moved away from placing their ads on the
screens of desktop and laptop computers where Google is alleged to
control the market, with money migrating to ads placed on apps and
mobile device screens. Israel cited marketing data showing display ad
spending on desktop and laptop devices has decreased from 71% in 2013 to
17% in 2022.
The government's case “seems to miss where the competition is today,”
Israel said.
His testimony comes as Google wraps up its defense in the third week of
an antitrust trial that began earlier this month in Alexandria,
Virginia. U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema has said she expects the
government will put on a short rebuttal case Friday. Then the trial will
go on hiatus, with both sides submitting proposed findings of fact in
November and returning to court to make closing arguments in December.
She said she expects to make a ruling by the end of the year.
The government's case alleges Google has built and maintained an illegal
monopoly that restricts choices and inflates costs for online publishers
and advertisers. Its control of the market has allowed Google to keep 36
cents on the dollar for every ad bought and sold through its ad tech
stack, the government claims.
[to top of second column] |
The Google building is seen in New York, Feb. 26, 2024. (AP
Photo/Seth Wenig, File)
The government says Google controls
advertising tech at every step of the process, including the
predominant technology used by publishers to sell their ad space,
the predominant technology used by advertisers looking to purchase
ad space, and the ad exchanges in the middle that conduct auctions
in a matter of milliseconds to match advertiser to publisher.
The government's case contends that Google illegally ties those
markets together, forcing publishers to use Google's technology if
they want access to Google's large cache of advertisers.
The government, using more narrow market definitions than those used
by Israel, has claimed that Google controls 91% of the market for
publisher ad servers and 87% of the market for advertising ad
networks.
Google says the government's case also fails to account for the
billions the company has invested to ensure its products, working
together, generate better value for publishers and advertisers by
matching the right advertisers to the right consumers.
Israel cited data showing publishers working with Google are
generating more revenue for each bit of ad space they make
available, while advertisers are paying less for each click their
ads generate.
That only occurs, Israel said, because Google's technology is
continually improving the quality of the ads by matching advertisers
to consumers based on their interests and purchase history.
Israel also disputed the government's claims that Google gets 36
cents on the dollar for the ad sales it facilitates. He said data
shows that percentage has dropped to 31% or 32% in recent years.
More importantly, he said, competitors have even higher take rates,
with an industry average of 42 cents on the dollar.
The Virginia trial is separate from another case brought by the
government alleging that Google's ubiquitous search engine
constitutes an illegal monopoly. In that case, a judge in the
district of Columbia ruled in favor of the government and declared
the search engine a monopoly, but no decision has yet been made on
any potential remedies. The government is scheduled to offer
suggestions of proposed remedies next month. those could include
restricting Google from paying tech companies to lock in Google as
the default search engine for gadgets like cellphones, or even
seeking to force google to sell off parts of its business.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |