The U.S. Department of Justice is proposing that Google sell two of its advertising products to restore competition in the ad tech space, according to a new filing. The proposal comes after a judge found Google guilty of âwillfully acquiring and maintaining monopoly powerâ in the digital ad space last month.
The DOJâs filing notes that Google should divest its ad exchange product AdX, along with a âphasedâ sale of DoubleClick for Publishers, an ad server for website publishers. The department also wants Google to avoid running an ad exchange for 10 years post the sale of AdX.
The DOJ alleged Google had âensured that publishers would lose significant revenue if they did not use AdX.â It also accused the search giant of creating a monopoly by integrating AdX and DFP, forcing websites to use Googleâs publisher product.
The proposal also directed Google to open up its ad buying tools, including AdWords, and have them work with all third-party ad tech products âon non-discriminatory terms with respect to bidding, matching, placement of ads, or provision of information, except at the express instruction of an advertiser.â
âThis comprehensive set of remediesâincluding divestiture of Googleâs unlawfully obtained monopolies and the products that were the principal instruments of Googleâs illegal schemeâis necessary to terminate Googleâs monopolies, deny Google the fruits of its violations, reintroduce competition into the ad exchange and publisher ad server markets, and guard against reoccurrence in the future,â the filing said.
In response to these proposals, Googleâs VP of regulatory affairs, Lee-Anne Mulholland, said that the measures would harm publishers and advertisers.
âThe DOJ conceded Googleâs proposed ad tech remedy fully addresses the Courtâs decision on liability. The DOJâs additional proposals to force a divestiture of our ad tech tools go well beyond the Courtâs findings, have no basis in law, and would harm publishers and advertisers,â Mulholland said in a statement.
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Google proposed its own set of remedies in a separate filing. These include making AdX real-time bids available to all third-party ad servers, and keeping Googleâs actions under an independent compliance observer for three years.
Google is fighting antitrust pressure from several directions. Separate from the ad tech case, the U.S. also wants the company to sell its Chrome browser after a judge found the company to be a monopoly in the online search market.

