Australia's antitrust watchdog said it wants the power to curb Google's use of Internet data to sell targeted advertisements, saying the Big Tech firm dominated the market to the point of harming publishers, advertisers, and consumers.
The comments, in a report published Tuesday, set up another possible showdown between Australia and Google months after the Alphabet unit vowed to pull core services from the country over a new content licensing law.
It may also spur along an anti-monopoly lawsuit reportedly being prepared by the US justice department accusing Google of using its market muscle to hobble advertising rivals. European regulators are also scrutinising Google's advertising business.
In its "ad tech" report, which still must be considered by the government, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) said Google's dominance of online advertising was so entrenched that existing laws were insufficient to rein in any anticompetitive behaviour.
More than 90 percent of clicks on advertisements that passed through Australia's "ad tech" supply chain went through at least one Google-owned service in 2020, the regulator said.
"Google has used its vertically integrated position to operate its ad tech services in a way that has, over time, led to a less competitive ad tech industry," ACCC Chair Rod Sims said in a statement.
"This conduct has helped Google to establish and entrench its dominant position in the ad tech supply chain. We recommend rules be considered to manage conflicts of interest, prevent anti-competitive self-preferencing, and ensure rival advertisement tech providers can compete on their merits."
A Google spokesman was not immediately available for comment. In a blog post published shortly before the ACCC report, Google said its advertising technology supported over 15,000 Australian jobs and contributed $2.45 billion (roughly Rs. 18,070 crores) a year to Australia's economy annually.
The ACCC said the US company benefited from vast amounts of Internet user data from its search engine, mapping and YouTube video streaming services, and must be more transparent about the way it uses this information to sell advertisements.
The regulator said it wanted special powers to address the imbalance of advertiser access to consumer data, such as rules stopping a company from using data collected by one service - such as mapping - to sell targeted advertisements without a rival company getting the same benefit.
It said it also wanted Google to be made to clarify publicly how it used people's data to sell and display advertisements.
The "ad tech" report was part of the ACCC's wider examination of online platforms which earlier this year prompted Google to say it might withdraw core services from the country over laws forcing it to pay for media content that features on its websites.
Google has since announced content payment deals with most of Australia's largest media outlets, as did social media giant Facebook which did cut news feeds in the country for a week in the days before the law was passed.
Treasurer Josh Frydenberg, who commissioned the report, said in a statement the government would consider the report's findings and recommendations.
© Thomson Reuters 2021
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