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The U.S Justice Department Is About To Sue Google

BERLIN, GERMANY - SEPTEMBER 26: A visitor passes the Google logo on September 26, 2012 at the official opening party of the Google offices in Berlin, Germany. Although the American company holds 95% of the German search engine market share and already has offices in Hamburg and Munich, its new offices on the prestigious Unter den Linden avenue are its first in the German capital. The Internet giant has been met with opposition in the country recently by the former president's wife, who has sued it based on search results for her name that she considers derogative. The European Commission has planned new data privacy regulations in a country where many residents opted in to have their homes pixeled out when the company introduced its Street View technology. (Photo by Adam Berry/Getty Images)

It seems like Google will face its second antitrust lawsuit filed by the US Department of Justice soon. According to Bloomberg, the DOJ is getting ready to sue the tech giant as soon as September after a year of looking into whether it’s been using its dominant position to illegally control the digital ad market. The Justice Department’s lawyers have reportedly been conducting another round of interviews to glean additional information that could help make their case stronger.

The first antitrust lawsuit was filed by the Justice Department in 2020. It accused Google of having an unfair monopoly over search and search-related advertising. It was further stated that forcing Android phone manufacturers to set Google as the default search engine keeps rivals from gaining traction and ensures that the company will earn an enormous amount of money from search-related advertising.

In the same year, Texas filed a multi-state lawsuit against Google, with the state’s Attorney General accusing the company of using its “monopolistic power to control” ad pricing. The company’s ad practices are under scrutiny not just in the US but in other parts of the world: The European Commission also started an investigation to know if Google limits rival services’ access to user data for ad purposes last year. To address the EU’s concerns, Reuters reported in June that Google may let rival ad platforms run ads on YouTube.

DOJ has not yet officially filed its case. Google spokesperson Peter Schottenfels defended the company’s ad business in a statement to Bloomberg, which says: “Our advertising technologies help websites and apps fund their content, and enable small businesses to reach customers around the world. The enormous competition in online advertising has made online ads more relevant, reduced ad tech fees, and expanded options for publishers and advertisers.”

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