EU antitrust authorities are ready to strike Google's advertising business

Alfonso Maruccia

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Staff
Something to look forward to: The feud between Europe's competition authorities and Google is nearing its conclusion, and Brussels is seemingly preparing a formal antitrust complaint against the US corporation. Google's online advertising empire could be shaken by a huge fine, or even be forced to change its anti-competitive ways.

According to people familiar with the matter, the European Union could announce its formal antitrust complaint against Google in the coming days. An official complaint would bring an end to a lengthy investigation by the European Commission (which is part of the executive branch of the European Union) over Mountain View's anti-competitive practices in the online advertising market.

Advertising is the main revenue drive for Google. In 2022 alone, online ads accounted for 80 percent of Alphabet's total revenues amounting to $225 billion. In 2020, advertising revenues were $168.6 billion. But Google's most successful business – and essentially the only profitable one – could be hindering competition, and the EU is finally ready to hold the Mountain View company accountable.

Brussels authorities started to look into Google's ad practices in 2021, trying to understand if the company had obstructed competing companies from accessing user data for online advertising. Google's ad service (Google Ads) has long been the main platform for online targeted advertising, selling ad space and providing advertisers and publishers a common ground as well.

Google's partnership with Meta/Facebook in the Open Bidding program was originally part of the EU investigation, but it was ditched in 2022. New evidence provided by Portuguese competition authorities was later added to the European investigation. Mountain View's advertising empire is also part of litigation in the UK and US.

A formal complaint by the EU could very much put a dent in Google's main business, as fines for antitrust violation can reach as much as 10 percent of a company's overall sales. Monetary fines imposed by Brussels have costed Google more than €8 billion (or $8.6 billion) so far.

The European Commission could also force Google to change its business practices and company structure, which could be even more damaging to Alphabet's exclusive cash cow than a financial penalty. Everything will likely be decided soon, perhaps as early as tomorrow.

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Not a surprise from what I have seen being in the industry, basically your options are google or Facebook, everything else is minor and nearly not worth it, though I expect Google to fight this tooth and nail, regardless of what dirty tactics they need to use, as advertising is clearly a massive part of their revenue, and it drives other activities directly/indirectly too, so it wouldn't be impossible for alphabet / google to collapse (at least the rest of it) if the EU forced business structure changes or a spin off of the ad company and it being broken up into smaller companies
 
Didn't saw a single ad for years... using Vivaldi with : "Ghostery", "ublock", some anti-ads scripts from github with "ViolentMonkey" , "Youtube enhancer" and "sponsor block" ... I use other things but just with those ... booom : 99% of your internet is without ads... YW
 
This hunt for ads is hurting mobile games on Google play. If every download wasn't a potential ads click, maybe games would have been better and more interesting / sophisticated, on the other hand, they are as good as their potential ads revenue would be.

 
"Google's online advertising empire could be shaken by a huge fine, or even be forced to change its anti-competitive ways."

A huge fine of $250M. These fines are notoriously low given the value of the companies they're hitting. Yes, I'm aware that their value does not translate into cash on hand, but they are always some small fraction of what they take in for a year.
 
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