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Friday September 3rd 2010

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Google Answers Its Antitrust Critics, Sort Of

by Erick Schonfeld

With an antitrust investigation brewing over its advertising deal with Yahoo, Google is going on the offensive in trying to answer its critics and push the deal through. CEO Eric Schmidt told reporters yesterday that all the scrutiny is being orchestrated by Microsoft and that Google plans on going ahead with the deal anyway.

Last week, Google’s chief economist Hal Varian gutted a study that claimed a Yahoo-Google advertising alliance will result in a 22 percent increase in advertising rates. And today, Google’s advertising chief Tim

Armstrong reiterated some of Varian’s points in an attempt to dispel the notion that the advertising deal with Yahoo will raise prices. From Armstrong’s post on the Google Public Policy Blog:

Question: Will the Google-Yahoo! agreement raise ad prices?
Answer: Neither Google nor Yahoo! set ad prices. Ads are priced by an auction where an advertiser only bids what an ad is worth to them.

Question: Can Yahoo! pick whose ads to show based on who has the highest price?
Answer: No. Under the terms of our agreement Yahoo! won’t be able to see the current auction prices for Google ads, and Google won’t be able to see Yahoo!’s prices.

Obviously, if Yahoo thinks it can make an additional $800 million in advertising revenues from the deal, that extra money is coming from somewhere. Probably in the form of increased prices. Google is trying to deflect that by saying that it doesn’t set prices, advertisers do. The end result will be the same. Whether it will be 22 percent or something else, prices on that Yahoo inventory will go up.   Read More

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