Google Accused of Abusing Market Dominance in Digital Advertising

UK's antitrust regulator provisionally finds Google using its dominance to restrict competition in the digital advertising space, potentially impacting thousands of British publishers and advertisers.
12 September 2024
Image by CyberBeat

Alphabet's Google is under scrutiny from Britain's antitrust regulator, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA). The CMA provisionally found that Google may have abused its power in digital advertising by suppressing competition.

The allegations focus on Google's preference for its own ad exchange which potentially affects thousands of UK publishers and advertisers. The CMA believes that Google's dominance could be interfering with the advertisement customers see on websites.

Google has disagreed with the CMA's claims, arguing that their advertising tools support websites and businesses of all sizes.

The tech giant is also facing investigations by the US Department of Justice and the European Commission.

The CMA alleges that Google's abusive behaviour can be traced back to 2015, favouring its own ad exchange, AdX, in operations.

The regulator has the authority to impose fines of up to 10% of global turnover and can issue legally binding orders to cease the infringement.

Google's representations will be evaluated, says the CMA, before deciding further action.

- CyberBeat 

About CyberBeat

CyberBeat is a grassroots initiative from a team of producers and subject matter experts, driven out of frustration at the lack of media coverage, responding to an urgent need to provide a clear, concise, informative and educational approach to the growing fields of Cybersecurity and Digital Privacy.

Contact CyberBeat

If you have a story of interest, a comment, a concern or if you'd just like to say Hi, please contact us

Terms & Policies >>

Sponsors

We couldn't do this without the support of our sponsors and contributors.