Google and US government battle over the future of internet advertising
[November 21, 2025] By
MICHAEL LIEDTKE
Google will confront the U.S. government's latest attempt to topple its
internet empire in federal court on Friday as a judge considers how to
prevent the abusive tactics that culminated in parts of its digital ad
network being branded as an illegal monopoly.
The courtroom showdown in Alexandria, Virginia, will pit lawyers from
Google and the U.S. Department of Justice against each other in closing
proceedings focused on the complex technology that distributes millions
of digital ads across the internet each day.
After a lengthy trial last year, U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema
ruled in April that pieces of Google's ad technology had been rigged in
a way that made it an illegal monopoly. That set up another 11-day trial
earlier this fall to help Brinkema determine how to remedy its
anti-competitive practices.
Friday's closing arguments will give both Google and the Justice
Department a final chance to sway Brinkema before she issues a ruling
that probably won't come until early next year.
The Justice Department wants Brinkema to force Google to sell some of
the ad technology that it has spent nearly 20 years assembling,
contending a breakup is the only way to rein in a company that the
agency's lawyers condemned as a “recidivist monopolist” in filings
leading up to Friday's hearing.
The condemnation refers not only to Google's practices in digital
advertising but also to the illegal monopoly that it unleashed through
its dominant search engine. Federal prosecutors also sought a breakup in
the search monopoly case, but the judge handling that issue rejected a
proposal that would have required Google to sell its popular Chrome web
browser.

Although Google is still being ordered to make reforms that it's
resisting, the outcome in the search monopoly case has been widely seen
as a proverbial slap on the wrist. The belief that Google got off easy
in the search case is the main reason the market value of its parent
company Alphabet surged by about $950 billion, or 37%, to nearly $3.5
trillion since U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta's decision came out in
early September.
[to top of second column] |

This is the Google logo on a building in New York, Oct. 27, 2025.
(AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)
 That setback hasn't discouraged the
Justice Department from arguing for a breakup of an ad tech system
that handles 55 million requests per second, according to estimates
provided by Google in court filings.
The huge volume of digital ads priced and distributed through
Google's technology is one of the main reasons that the company's
lawyers contend it would be too risky to force a dismantling of the
intricate system.
“This is technology that absolutely has to keep working for
consumers,” Google argues in documents leading up to Friday's
hearing. The company's lawyers blasted the Justice Department's
proposal as a package of “legally unprecedented and unsupported
divestitures.”
Besides arguing that its own proposed changes will bring more price
transparency and foster more competition, Google is also citing
market upheaval triggered by artificial intelligence as another
reason for the judge to proceed cautiously with her decision.
In his decision in the search monopoly case, Mehta reasoned that AI
was already posing more competition to Google.
But the Justice Department urged the judge to focus on the testimony
from a litany of trial witnesses who outlined why Google shouldn't
be trusted to change its devious behavior.
The witnesses “explained how Google can manipulate computer
algorithms that are the engine of its monopolies in ways too
difficult to detect,” the Justice Department argued in court papers.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |