December 20, 2007 7:24 AM PST
FTC allows Google-DoubleClick merger to proceed
Last modified: December 20, 2007 1:30 PM PST
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Third, despite concerns that mergers involving a dominant market player would take away an important "tool" used by other players, FTC officials found that DoubleClick lacks market power in third-party ad-serving markets. As a result, the FTC said, it's unlikely that Google could "manipulate DoubleClick's third-party ad-serving products" as a means to put Google's competitors at a disadvantage in the ad intermediation market.
Privacy pressures
And although the FTC has said it is solely focused on competition issues when reviewing mergers,
Reception on Capitol Hill has been mixed since the deal was announced. A U.S. Senate panel charged with overseeing antitrust law
House Democratic leaders never got around to holding their own hearing this year. Rep. Bobby Rush (D-Ill.), who leads a House consumer protection panel, said in a statement late Thursday that he plans to "investigate" the merger's privacy implications--and online behavioral advertising practices more generally--when Congress reconvenes next year.
Although the FTC's scrutiny was limited to competition issues, "my primary concern, throughout, has been the privacy of consumer information," Rush said in a statement. "Those concerns are as strong today as they were eight months ago when this merger was first announced."
The European Commission, which is also taking a
And
Although a four-month gap exists between the FTC's decision and the deadline for the European Commission, European attorneys who specialize in antitrust matters do not anticipate the Commission to suddenly ramp up its review of the proposed merger.
"I don't have any reason to believe the Commission will accelerate its review," said Thomas Vinje, an antitrust attorney with Clifford Chance in Brussels. "The relevant market circumstances are different in Europe, as is the law. While Google is very strong in the relevant markets in the United States, it is far more dominant, indeed it is overwhelmingly dominant, in Europe. This deal thus would have greater consequences in Europe than in the United States, and in order to fulfill its duty to apply European law, the Commission still has very serious competition concerns to address," Vinje said.
FTC officials noted in their statement that consumer privacy issues are "not unique to Google and DoubleClick and extend to the entire online advertising marketplace."
In its majority decision, the agency said it lacks the legal authority to "require conditions to this merger that do not relate to antitrust," adding that "regulating the privacy requirements of just one company could itself pose a serious detriment to competition in this vast and rapidly evolving industry."
That reasoning drew sharp criticism on Thursday from Jeff Chester, director of the Center for Digital Democracy, which along with the Electronic Privacy Information Center petitioned the FTC to review privacy questions raised by the deal. Privacy advocates
"With today's decision," he said in a statement, "the FTC is helping ensure that U.S. consumers will have to live under the shadow of an even bigger digital giant, with a privacy time bomb ticking in the background."
In an attempt to mollify privacy advocates who attacked the Google-DoubleClick deal, the FTC said it would be on the lookout for broader privacy issues arising from increasingly sophisticated online advertising tactics industrywide. The agency on Thursday released
The ideas--about which the agency is seeking public comment--include transparency and consumer control, limited retention of user data, and obtaining "affirmative" user consent before using "sensitive" data to target ads. The suggestions were inspired by
Commissioner Jon Leibowitz, who voted to give the deal the go-ahead, attempted to amplify those potential concerns in a separate concurring statement. He called on the agency to "address the fundamental issues of consumer privacy and data security raised by online behavioral advertising, which go well beyond the two companies involved in this acquisition."
Electronic Privacy Information Center director Marc Rotenberg said he was surprised by the decision but warned that the scrutiny will not end yet. EPIC and CDD recently filed a legal request for all FTC records related to what they view as a possible problem with the deal's review: the fact that
Still, that's an issue that EPIC and CDD plan to raise with congressional oversight committees, Rotenberg said in a lengthy statement responding to the FTC's conclusions. In Rotenberg's view, the agency shirked its obligations to protect the public interest by ruling the way it did and suggested the proposed principles aren't nearly enough.
"A majority of the Commissioners chose to ignore the privacy implications of the Google-DoubleClick merger," he said, "and to propose instead the same self-regulatory approach to privacy protection that has repeatedly failed American consumers and could have been put forward whether or not a merger review was also under way."
CNET News.com reporter Elinor Mills contributed to this report.
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I hope that I don't regret saying this, because it is possible that Google could become evil in the future, but as it stands right now, they are the best company for DoubleClick.
If Microsoft got DoubleClick, then the end of the world would have been nigh.
Yes
Scanning....
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Deleted
Could not delete "Google Home Page" You need to find another. Suggest you set to "blank" to avoid further infections.
Super AntiSpyware is finished
http://www.alleyinsider.com/2007/12/microsoft-in-denial-google-threat-is-classic-disruption.html
As to why some folks would use these products that has certain limitations is any ones guess. Why get on an "spaceship" that is only going to take you three-quarters of the distance that you have to travel. How in this universe are you going to be able to complete the rest of the journey? This is perhaps one of the reasons why those home-owners are going through the experiences that they are going through. IBM's Moon (Serenity Systems International and OS/2PLEX (OS/2's Programmers and Business Consultants) - the "Trees" will guarantee a splendid and complete (business class) journey at WARP SPEED rather than the "three-quarters way" Microsoft and Google-DoubleClick "turbulent rides". EXPERIENCE COUNTS/MATTERS.
MERRY CHRISTMAS!
LIVE LONG AND PROSPER!
SPOCK.