Google Fined $1.7B for Abusing Its Online Marketing Role

The European Commission has slapped Google with a massive $1.7 billion fine for abusing the online ad market. Google's "abusi

The European Commission has slapped Google with a massive $1.7 billion fine for abusing the online ad market. Google's “abusive practices in online advertising” have been deemed a breach of EU antitrust rules.

What are the abusive practices? Google had blocked its online search advertising rivals during the period between 2006 and 2016, keeping third-party websites from running rival search ads if they displayed Google's own AdSense ads.

This is Google's third EU fine within the past two years, for a total dollar amount that tops $9 billion.

What Did Google Do Wrong?

According to the new ruling, Google's AdSense advertising contracts with websites during the ten-year period in question were overly restrictive, forcing websites to block Google's rivals from advertising if they wanted to benefit from AdSense ads.

“Google abused its dominance to stop websites using brokers other than the AdSense platform,” EU’s competition commissioner, Margrethe Vestager, said in a Wednesday news conference.

Google controls 70 percent of the European online search ad market, according to the EU's count.

Google's History With European Courts

This is just the latest in a long line of rulings from the EU against Google.

In July 2018, Google saw its biggest fine ever from the EU, an eye-watering $5 billion fine levied on the search giant for a similar rival-crushing tactic: Google abused its Android market share by bundling Google apps on the platform while blocking other phone makers from creating forked version of Android.

And, in 2017, Google's now apparently annual EU antitrust fine totalled $2.7 billion, and was due to the company's practice of giving priority search placement to its own shopping service, while shunting rival services to less-clicked sections of search results pages.

What's Google Saying?

Google is in the process of appealing both the 2017 and 2018 fines, meaning that they have yet to pay a cent of the now roughly $9.3 billion the EU has fined them. They're “mulling” whether to appeal the latest fine, according to a New York Times report that only gives a single, rather vague statement from Google itself:

“Healthy, thriving markets are in everyone’s interest.”

Google's owner Alphabet earned pre-tax profits of $30.7 billion across 2018, meaning that Google isn't about to shut down anytime soon.

In fact, some commentators even say that a mere $1.7 billion a year could be seen as a cost-of-doing-business price within Google: “I’m certain that Google would happily pay $170M per year for a decade worth of monopoly building in the European ads market,” tweeted Mike Dudas, CEO of The Block and a former Google employee.

“What Google has done is illegal under EU antitrust rules,” Vestager said in 2017 of the $2.7 billion fine. “It denied other companies the chance to compete on the merits and to innovate. And most importantly, it denied European consumers a genuine choice of services and the full benefits of innovation.”

Google Shopping, Android, and Adsense all benefited from Google's outsized share of the ad market: Healthy and thriving markets might be in most people's interest, but it seems Google saw enough benefit in avoiding them to absorb three fines (and counting).

Vestager was talking about just one fine at the time, but her statement was an apt summation of the EU's entire antitrust philosophy, and it certainly appears to have determined its fines in the years since. Google may not agree, but at this point it seems clear that the EU won't back down on their antitrust policies any time soon.

Did you find this article helpful? Click on one of the following buttons
We're so happy you liked! Get more delivered to your inbox just like it.

We're sorry this article didn't help you today – we welcome feedback, so if there's any way you feel we could improve our content, please email us at contact@tech.co

Written by:
Adam is a writer at Tech.co and has worked as a tech writer, blogger and copy editor for more than a decade. He was a Forbes Contributor on the publishing industry, for which he was named a Digital Book World 2018 award finalist. His work has appeared in publications including Popular Mechanics and IDG Connect, and his art history book on 1970s sci-fi, 'Worlds Beyond Time,' is out from Abrams Books in July 2023. In the meantime, he's hunting down the latest news on VPNs, POS systems, and the future of tech.
Explore More See all news
Back to top