UK greenlights $17 billion legal claim against Google

UK greenlights $17 billion legal claim against Google

LONDON

A multibillion-pound claim against Google for alleged anti-competitiveness in digital advertising can proceed to trial, the U.K.'s Competition Appeal Tribunal has ruled.

The 13.6 billion pounds claim ($17.4 billion), brought by the Ad Tech Collective Action LLP, accuses the U.S. tech giant of abusing its dominant position and causing significant losses to U.K. online publishers.

The case centres around so-called ad tech, the system that decides which online adverts people see and how much they cost.

At the heart of the Ad Tech Collective Action argument is the claim that Google has abused its position in the market by promoting its own products and services over those of rivals.

"This is a decision of major importance to the victims of Google's anti-competitive conduct in ad tech," Claudio Pollack, a partner of Ad Tech Collective Action, said in response to the June 5’s announcement.

"Google will now have to answer for its practices in a full trial" at a date to be decided, he said.

Oliver Bethell, legal director at Google, called the lawsuit "speculative and opportunistic", adding that the tech giant would "oppose it vigorously".