
"The Atlantic on Tuesday sued Google and its parent company Alphabet, alleging the tech giant's model of serving ads to publishers has become a monopoly and that it has falsely claimed its ad serving practices would serve the Atlantic's interest - only to enrich itself instead. In a 94-page federal complaint filed in New York's southern district, the magazine claimed that Google and Alphabet have "unlawfully acquired and maintain monopolies for the advertising technology...tools that publishers and advertisers use to buy and sell online ad space." Such control, it claimed, forces publishers to sell ads through Google at lower prices."
""The result is dramatically less revenue for publishers and Google's ad-tech rivals, while Google reaps exorbitant monopoly profits," its attorneys wrote. The publisher accused Google of violating state law and the Sherman Act and the Clayton Act, two federal antitrust laws that prohibit monopolies and price discrimination, respectively. The magazine seeks damages, attorneys' fees and a jury trial. The Atlantic did not have an immediate comment. Google did not respond to an immediate request for comment."
"The Atlantic also claimed that, because Google has centralized its ad server through its exchanges, it has prevented publishers from soliciting bids from rival ad exchanges. Google then promoted its ad serving and exchange bidding services as a way to boost publishers' revenue, the Atlantic alleged, only for such claims to be false representations intended to boost Google's own revenue. "The enrichment and benefit to Google came at the expense of The Atlantic," the complaint read. "For years, Google has represented that its ad serving practices were in The Atlantic's interests," the complaint continued. "Time and again, Google staff have acknowledged internally that these representations were false, that publisher inventory pricing was reduced, and that its auction manipulations were 'inhere"
A 94-page federal complaint filed in New York's southern district alleges that Google and Alphabet unlawfully acquired and maintain monopolies over advertising-technology tools that publishers and advertisers use to buy and sell online ad space. The complaint alleges that such control forces publishers to sell ads through Google at lower prices, dramatically reducing publisher revenue and harming Google's ad-tech rivals while generating monopoly profits for Google. The complaint accuses Google of violating state law, the Sherman Act, and the Clayton Act, and seeks damages, attorneys' fees, and a jury trial. The complaint also alleges that Google centralized its ad server, blocked rival exchange bids, made false revenue-boosting representations to publishers, and that internal Google staff acknowledged reduced inventory pricing and auction manipulations.
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