Insead makes a grand entrance, Edhec overtakes ESCP and Essec

Insead makes a grand entrance, Edhec overtakes ESCP and Essec
Insead
      makes
      a
      grand
      entrance,
      Edhec
      overtakes
      ESCP
      and
      Essec
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AFP Videos – France

Antitrust: US attacks Google’s advertising empire

Google faces its second major U.S. lawsuit in less than a year on Monday, with the U.S. government accusing the tech giant of dominating online advertising and stifling competition. The Virginia trial follows a landmark ruling last month over online search that found Google has an illegal monopoly on the industry. The new battle, also brought by the U.S. Justice Department, focuses on ad technology, the complex computer system that determines which ads are seen by which users and how much they cost brands. The government accuses Google of controlling the market for displaying banner ads on websites, including those of many media outlets. “Google has used illegal anticompetitive means to eliminate or substantially reduce threats to its dominance in digital advertising technologies,” the lawsuit says. Government lawyers say Google has used its financial muscle to acquire potential rivals and corner the market, leaving advertisers and publishers with no choice but to use its technology. They are seeking to get Google to divest parts of its ad-tech business. – ‘Not much sympathy’ – Google rejects the allegations as “fundamentally flawed” and says they run counter to “antitrust principles that help drive economic growth and innovation.” “The case is also factually flawed, which Google is eager to demonstrate,” the California-based company said in a court filing. The company says the case is based on an outdated version of the internet, ignoring today’s context, where ads are also placed in search results, mobile apps and social media. But while the market at issue in this trial is small relative to the broader advertising ecosystem, it is “critical to the survival of a lot of important sources of information for the public,” said Evelyn Mitchell-Wolf, an analyst at Emarketer. “I’m not sure I have much sympathy” for the argument that publishers should settle for fewer options to generate revenue, she added. The trial is expected to last at least six weeks and involve dozens of witnesses, before Judge Leonie Brinkema. Her decision on whether Google violated antitrust laws will be made several months after the trial. If convicted, a separate trial will decide what the potential consequences will be for the world’s largest online advertising company. Analysts at Wedbush Securities expect the economic impact of the trial to be limited for Google, regardless of the outcome. Because the business that the government could demand be sold represented less than 1% of the firm’s operating income this year, according to them. The Emarketer firm estimates Google’s global market share in digital advertising at nearly 28% in 2024, ahead of its neighbor Meta (Facebook, Instagram) and its 23%, Amazon (9%) and ByteDance’s TikTok platform (Douyin in China) (7%). Similar investigations into Google’s dominant position in advertising technology are underway in the European Union and the United Kingdom. As for the case on the search engine monopoly, it has entered the appeals phase. The American government is expected to propose an overhaul of Google’s business in the coming weeks.arp/juj/eml/tmt

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