For
years,
Google
took
the
same
20
percent
commission
for
ad
transactions
that
ran
through
its
platform,
even
though
it
was
higher
than
what
any
other
industry
player
charged.
Executives
privately
worried
the
fee
was
difficult
to
defend.
Now,
the
Justice
Department
argues
it’s
a
key
sign
of
Google’s
monopoly
over
online
ads.
Google’s
so-called
take
rate
took
center
stage
on
the
last
day
of
week
one
in
the
Justice
Department’s
second
antitrust
trial
against
Google.
Citing
internal
Google
documents
and
the
testimony
of
former
Google
sell-side
ads
executive
Chris
LaSala,
the
DOJ
sought
to
demonstrate
that
Google
never
experienced
any
real
pricing
pressure
due
to
its
unshakable
dominance
in
the
market,
despite
knowing
its
fee
was
higher
than
competitors’
and
being
aware
of
customer
complaints
about
its
tools.
The
trial
continues
this
week,
with
YouTube
CEO
and
former
Google
ads
executive
Neal
Mohan
testifying
on
Monday.
According
to
emails
presented
in
court,
Google
executives
wondered
whether
the
20
percent
fee
their
AdX
exchange
charged
for
facilitating
transactions
was
sustainable
and
worried
about
how
they’d
continue
to
justify
it.
Jonathan
Bellack,
another
ad
executive
at
Google,
wrote
in
one
2018
exchange
that
the
fee
was
“not
long
term
defensible.”
He
also
acknowledged
in
a
different
2018
email
that
the
fee
should
get
in
line
with
market
value
and
that
it
“shouldn’t
be
double
the
price.”
But
the
pricing
persisted,
largely
because
Google
could
control
access
to
a
huge
advertiser
base
through
the
Google
Ads
Network,
only
allowing
publishers
the
fullest
access
to
that
market
through
AdX.
In
one
2018
email,
responding
to
another
executive’s
question
about
disclosing
Google’s
buy-side
fee
and
how
much
it
should
be,
LaSala
noted
that
the
fee
for
buying
and
selling
ads
“holds
today
not
because
there
is
20%
of
value
in
comparing
2
bids
to
one
another,
but
because
it
comes
with
unique
demand
via
AdWords
that
is
not
available
any
other
way.”
He
said
he
believed
“a
sell-side
rev
share
should
probably
top
out
at
10%”
for
the
open
auction
and
that
the
“unique
demand”
from
Google
Ads
was
“the
only
reason
we
can
sustain
20%.”
Jonathan
Bellack,
another
ad
executive
at
Google,
wrote
in
one
2018
exchange
that
the
fee
was
“not
long
term
defensible.”
In
a
2019
email
exchange,
LaSala
recognized
“a
continued
call
from
buyers
and
publishers
for
transparency.
It
is
reasonable
and
should
not
be
dismissed.”
He
also
said
it
was
“questionable”
the
20
percent
fee
was
“reasonable
long
term”
and
pointed
to
a
signal
that
“the
market
rate”
for
open
auction
ad
transactions
was
“closer
to
10%.”
Brian
O’Kelley,
who
founded
AppNexus,
which
ran
an
ad
exchange
and
unsuccessfully
tried
to
build
a
publisher
ad
server
to
compete
with
Google’s,
described
in
a
deposition
AdX’s
20
percent
take
rate
as
“dramatically
higher
than
competitors’.”
The
messages
between
Google
executives
highlight
their
recognition
that
AdX’s
power
to
link
Google’s
publisher-side
tool
and
its
large
advertiser
base
let
the
company
charge
an
unusually
high
commission.
While
Google
has
argued
that
its
system
ended
up
benefiting
all
parties,
the
government
is
attempting
to
prove
that
it
illegally
tied
together
its
publisher
ad
server
and
its
ad
exchange
—
not
to
provide
better
service
but
to
maintain
a
monopoly.
“Publishers
keep
the
vast
majority
of
the
revenue
when
they
use
Google’s
advertising
technology,
and
our
fees
are
transparent
and
in
line
with
industry
rates,”
Google
spokesperson
Jackie
Berté
said
in
a
statement.
“Even
when
only
Google’s
tools
are
used
to
buy
and
sell
the
ad,
the
publisher
keeps
about
70%
of
the
revenue.” Google
will
get
its
chance
to
present
witnesses
and
make
its
own
case
against
the
DOJ
once
the
government’s
case
wraps
up.
Even
as
Google
has
defended
its
service,
Google
employees
recognized
how
hard
it
would
be
for
publishers
to
switch
ad
servers
if
they
were
unhappy.
LaSala
testified
that
it
was
a
“heavy
lift”
to
switch
ad
servers
and
could
only
think
of
one
publisher
in
all
his
time
at
Google
who
actually
did
it:
Disney.
Rather
than
switch
to
another
tool,
Disney
built
its
own.
As
Tom
Kershaw,
the
former
chief
technology
officer
at
rival
ad
exchange
Rubicon,
testified
earlier
in
the
day,
“I
have
the
option
to
starve
to
death.
I
don’t
choose
to
take
that
option.”
Forgoing
access
to
Google’s
advertiser
network
by
bypassing
AdX,
he
said,
“is
equivalent.”
Original author: Lauren Feiner
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