Unexpected character encountered while parsing value: <. Path '', line 0, position 0.
Zuckerberg, Pichai signed 'big deal' to carve up ad market: ReportSan Francisco, Jan 15 - A serious anti-trust complaint in the US has reportedly revealed that Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Alphabet and Google CEO Sundar Pichai were allegedly involved in an ad collusion plot, a charge that both tech giants denied. Attorneys for Texas and other states alleged in newly unsealed court filings that Zuckerberg and Pichai "personally approved a secret deal that gave the social network a leg up in the search giant's online advertising auctions", reports Politico. Led by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, the group of state attorneys general released a new antitrust complaint against Google, giving more details into the company's alleged collusion with Facebook in programmatic ad markets. The states originally filed the suit against Google in December 2020, and updated that with a heavily-redacted version in November last year. The initial complaint alleged collusion between the two tech giants, particularly in a project codenamed "Jedi Blue". The "Jedi Blue" deal was reviewed at the highest levels of both companies, with personal involvement from Pichai, Meta COO Sheryl Sandberg, and Zuckerberg. In one email to Zuckerberg, Sandberg allegedly told the CEO "(t)his is a big deal strategically". According to the report that came out on Friday, the complaint said the team that negotiated the deal sent Zuckerberg an email telling him: "We're nearly ready to sign and need your approval to move forward." "The 2018 deal gave Facebook possibly unlawful advantages when the social network used Google's advertising exchange, according to allegations by Texas, 14 other states and Puerto Rico in the latest version of their federal antitrust suit against Google," said the report. Sandberg and a Google senior vice president signed the September 2018 agreement, the lawsuit claimed, adding that "Google CEO Sundar Pichai also personally signed off on the terms of the deal". In a statement to The Verge, a Google spokesperson said: "AG Paxton's assertion isn't accurate. We sign hundreds of agreements every year that don't require CEO approval, and this was no different." Meta also denied that the arrangement was illegal. "Meta's non-exclusive bidding agreement with Google and the similar agreements we have with other bidding platforms, have helped to increase competition for ad placements," Meta spokesperson Christopher Sgro said in a statement. The fresh case came amid antitrust actions against Google, including parallel antitrust cases focusing on search manipulation and its management of the Google Play Store. --IANS na/ksk/ Please Share this article with your friends. Sponsor Related & Matched:
More from:International NewsIn victory, Pep concedes the amount of pressure exerted by Liverpool Conservation groups call for action from new Australian govt John Travolta, Stephen Dorff to star in 'American Metal', film picked up at Cannes market Storm in Canada kills 8, leaves thousands without power Shadab, Nawaz return for Pakistan's ODI series against West Indies Houthis head to Jordan to discuss lifting siege on Yemeni city Iran sees breakthrough in ties with Gulf Arab states: Official SEVENTEEN drop highlight medley for fourth studio album 'Face The Sun' HSBC suspends senior executive who said climate change is being exaggerated Night markets in Seoul set to reopen after 2 yrs Islamabad police getting ready to 'resist' Imran's long march Australian Titmus breaks 400m freestyle world record Covid, monkeypox poses formidable challenge to world: WH0 Rosneft commemorates oilmen feat in World War II New Australian women's interim cricket coach Nitschke rules out wholesale changes |