The US Department of Justice has launched an antitrust investigation into the
advertising
deal announced by Yahoo and Google in June.
The non-exclusive agreement lets Yahoo use Google's AdSense for Search and
AdSense for Content advertising programmes, effectively allowing Yahoo the
option of displaying Google ads alongside its own search results.
Both companies have now agreed to give antitrust authorities three months to
look at the deal before going ahead.
Reports suggest that the investigators are also planning to review documents
from other online media firms.
Google and Yahoo dominate the search arena, holding around 80 per cent of the
market between them.
The two companies are not merging, and the deal is not exclusive for either
party, so the partnership does not need upfront approval from the authorities.
However, if the deal is considered anti-competitive it could be stopped or
modified to ensure fairness.
The launch of a formal investigation suggests that the DoJ may have found
some cause for concern.
Martin Warner, co-founder of Technology of Tomorrow 2008, said: "This is the
same as the Microsoft browser issue. Google advertising accounts for 55 per cent
of all advertising expenditure in the US.
"A deal with Yahoo will give them a massive monopoly, not just in the US but
in the global market."
Warner added that the ramifications of this are "huge for a variety of
stakeholders" particularly the advertisers themselves.
The deal could also fundamentally affect the way users access information
online, and how new services evolve on the internet, as it will entail a huge
manipulation of the market, he said.
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