Current:Home > FinanceAt Google antitrust trial, documents say one thing. The tech giant’s witnesses say different -Wealth Evolution Experts
At Google antitrust trial, documents say one thing. The tech giant’s witnesses say different
View
Date:2025-04-11 12:35:46
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) — The judge who will decide whether Google holds a monopoly over technology that matches buyers and sellers of online advertising must choose whether to believe what Google executives wrote or what they have said on the witness stand.
The Justice Department is wrapping up its antitrust case against Google this week at a federal courtroom in Virginia. The federal government and a coalition of states contend Google has built and maintained a monopoly on the technology used to buy and sell the ads that appear to consumers when they browse the web.
Google counters that the government is improperly focused on a very narrow slice of advertising — essentially the rectangular banner ads that appear on the top and along the right side of a publisher’s web page — and that within the broader online advertising market, Google is beset on all sides from competition that includes social media companies and streaming TV services.
Many of the government’s key witnesses have been Google managers and executives, who have often sought to disavow what they have written in emails, chats and company presentations.
This was especially true Thursday during the testimony of Jonathan Bellack, a product manager at Google who wrote an email that government lawyers believe is particularly damning.
In 2016, Bellack wrote an email wondering, “Is there a deeper issue with us owning the platform, the exchange, and a huge network? The analogy would be if Goldman or Citibank owned the NYSE,” the New York Stock Exchange.
For the Justice Department, Bellack’s description is almost a perfect summary of its case. It alleges that Google’s tech dominates both the market that online publishers use to sell available ad space on their web pages, and the tech used by huge networks of advertisers to buy ad space. Google even dominates the “ad exchanges” that serve as a middleman to match buyer and seller, the lawsuit alleges.
As a result of Google’s dominance in all parts of the transaction, Justice alleges the Mountain View, California-based tech giant has shut out competitors and been able to charge exorbitant fees that amount to 36 cents on the dollar for every ad impression that runs through its stack of ad tech.
On the stand Thursday, though, Bellack dismissed his email as “late night, jet-lagged ramblings.” He said he didn’t think Google’s control of the buy side, the sell side and the middleman was an issue, but was speculating why certain customers were looking for workarounds to Google’s technology.
Most of the other current and former Google employees who have testified as government witnesses have similarly rejected their own written words.
Earlier this week, another Google executive, Nirmal Jayaram, spent large parts of his testimony disavowing viewpoints expressed in emails he wrote or articles and presentations he co-authored.
The Justice Department contends, of course, that what the Google employees wrote in real time is a more accurate reflection of reality. And it says there would be even more damning documentary evidence if Google had not systematically deleted many of the internal chats that employees used to discuss business, even after the company was put on notice that it was under investigation.
Testimony has shown that Google implemented a “Communicate with Care” policy in which employees were instructed to add company lawyers to sensitive emails so they could be marked as “privileged” and exempt from disclosure to government regulators.
U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema called Google’s policies on retention of documents “absolutely inappropriate and improper” and something she has taken notice of during the trial, though she has not imposed any kind of specific punishment.
The Virginia trial began Sept. 9, just a month after a judge in the District of Columbia declared Google’s core business, its ubiquitous search engine, an illegal monopoly. That trial is still ongoing to determine what remedies, if any, the judge can impose.
The ad tech at question in the Virginia trial does not generate the same kind of revenue for Goggle as its search engine does, but is still believed to generate tens of billions of dollars of revenue annually.
The Virginia trial has been moving at a much quicker pace than the D.C. case. The government has presented witnesses for nine days straight and has nearly concluded its case. The judge has told Google it should expect to begin presenting its own witnesses Friday.
veryGood! (97)
Related
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Argentine peso plunges after rightist who admires Trump comes first in primary vote
- Look Back on Halle Berry's Best Looks Ever
- Video shows ‘mob’ steal up to $100,000 worth of items at Nordstrom in Los Angeles: Police
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Clarence Avant, 'The Black Godfather' of music, dies at 92
- 'The Fantasticks' creator Tom Jones dies at 95
- Derek Carr throws a TD pass in his Saints debut, a 26-24 preseason win over the Chiefs
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- 76ers shut down James Harden trade talks, determined to bring him back, per report
Ranking
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- At least 20 Syrian soldiers killed in ISIS bus ambush, activists say
- Call it 'stealth mental health' — some care for elders helps more without the label
- Ashley Olsen Privately Gives Birth, Welcomes First Baby With Husband Louis Eisner
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Is Biden's plan to stem immigration seeing any success?: 5 Things podcast
- Survival of Wild Rice Threatened by Climate Change, Increased Rainfall in Northern Minnesota
- Woman goes missing after a car crash, dog finds her two days later in a Michigan cornfield
Recommendation
Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
Prosecutors have started presenting Georgia election investigation to grand jury
EXPLAINER: Why is a police raid on a newspaper in Kansas so unusual?
Wildfires in Maui are among the deadliest in US history. These are the other fires atop the list
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Judge in Donald Trump’s hush-money case denies bias claim, won’t step aside
Maryland man leads Virginia police on wild chase in stolen truck and ambulance before DC arrest
Jury acquits 1 of 2 brothers charged in 2013 slaying in north central Indiana