ok...USA v Google Day One 1am dump. On a positive, I was able to be in-person for every minute. Thrilled as it's the only way I could capture my 8 pages of notes. I'm going to focus on items of interest I think others might miss starting with 1st witness then work backward. /1
So witness one, Google chief economist, Hal Varian. The news headlines will be the memos and emails, we can get to that. But my personal takeaway was Varian, although a legend in academia, also has a significant role to try to minimize antitrust risk for Google. Ironic enough. /2
We saw emails likely being used to show Google considered its search market to include only Yahoo and Bing/MSN but we also saw Varian warning and coaching employees on avoiding the term "market share." Lots of Google warnings about what they say publicly and privately. Hmm. /3
We saw emails around Bing/Y deal providing a look into G's offensive PR machine at work. G offered up Varian for a Q&A with CNET (Tom Krazit) where he used a hyperbolic statement to send a message, "search scale is bogus." /4
It was interesting to see G's execs fret over a mostly unedited Q&A suggesting they wouldn't reach out to Krazit in future (like FB, G plays access games w/ press). But then they relaxed as target msg made it to other outlets, including google chronicler, searchengineland. /5
The "I don’t think I’ll be reaching out to Tom in the future” section also got some laughs as G's legal eagles objected to an unedited Q&A with a journalist as "hearsay" but then it was pointed out that Varian's email said he wished it was edited. /6
my read is Varian was sent out externally to deliver a msg downplaying scale and data (for antitrust reasons). He got his public headlines. But then we were able to see an extensive internal debate w. head of search flat out disagreeing with Varian's external statements. /7
In that episode, we also saw Marissa Mayer disagree siding with head of search (Udi). I caught in email, "Adam K is talking to him" which presumably is Adam now at Chamber of Progress who would also be concerned about any senior execs questioning downplaying of scale/data. /8
And the entire episode was capped when G's Chief Scientist was later quoted saying, "we don't have better algorithms, we just have more data." Including email from Varian, "groan," to an internal email group titled "invisible-hands" which sounds like a black ops address. /9
to the DOJ's case, we saw a 2003 "Power of Defaults" memo from Varian laying out defensive strategy to raise switching costs that he then shared in 2006 with an employee who came back 9 months later with a deck to do just this (which Varian seemed to love).
Pretty damaging. /10
Strategy included 'weaponizing' the default homepage as it was a vulnerability point for Yahoo and Bing, their "achilles heels." Deck showed being default homepage raised searches 15%+ while almost all product changes barely move needle 2%. DOJ laid foundation for defaults. /11
It also got at Google's strategy. Leverage data harvesting across users' full digital life and entirety of the web. We saw a response that when Facebook grows, Google grows. Basically Google rides the growth of the full web. LOVED how much DOJ leaned into data+antitrust. /12
Helpful to see emails of Varian seemingly arguing against the economic value of navigational traffic through Google saying, "WRT the value of our product, specifically search, if Google were to disappear people would switch to Bing." Why does this matter? Two reasons. /13
One. Email was Feb 2021. I would bet a sandwich it was in response to work being done by Google's trade group, IAB, as they created their Oct 2021 report on the internet economy and Varian was saying you can include economic value of search ads but not the navigational stuff. /14
Two. Google's key argument against news bargaining codes in Australia, Canada, et al has been the value they create through search traffic. Here was their chief economist downplaying value of it saying, meh, if we (google) go away then that traffic just goes through Bing. /15
In terms of the opening statement by DOJ, I'm sure that will be thoroughly covered but I did enjoy the title, "What *DID* Google Do?" Considering one of Google's biggest advocates in academia wrote an infamous book, "What would Google do?" it was quite a perfect title. /16
We saw a tease as to rules in Google's billion $ deal w/ Apple. One rule said Apple can't turn on private browsing by default. I wrote in my notes someone else's statement that “If google sets the rules, it will always be to their advantage.” Very true imho. /17
Although Google argues the Apple deal wasn't exclusive, DOJ shared a message that went to apple during renewal negotiations that said essentially if Apple gave consumers choice of their default then they wouldn't get their billions in revenue sharing. Ouch. /18
DOJ used the phrase, "manipulating pricing knobs," which I also noted in their pretrial filing. This relates to Google's alleged ability to turn dials to increase revenues, queries, etc at a cost to the experience/consumers and advertisers' prices. /19
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Midnight dump. USA vs Google Day 3. I wasn't able to attend Dr Rangel counter (he was great yday) so my highlights (again, trying to pick unique things I captured) start with G's VP Android Partnerships (Jim Kolotourus). 20yrs at G. Seems like nice guy. But he started awkward. /1
paraphrasing...
DOJ: "Are MADA and RSA the two core commercial agreements?"
Kolotourus: "I wouldn't use the word 'core.' They aren't the two core agreements."
DOJ: "Let's take a look at exhibit X, and turn to the slide labeled "Two Core Agreements: MADA and RSA" /2
paraphrasing
DOJ: "Is a MADA agreement a requirement for an OEM to have an RSA agreement?"
Kolotourus: "No."
DOJ: "Can you name any OEM with RSA without a MADA agreement?"
Kolotourus: "Um, no." /3
Woah. (In other court news of a defendant piling up losses), Google just had its @$$ handed to it in a privacy suit.
Denied Summary Judgment on seven counts 1) Wiretap Act 2) CIPA 3) CDAFA 4) UCL 5) invasion of privacy 6) intrusion upon seclusion and 7) breach of contract.
/1
It's another lawsuit where a federal court clearly shows it understands how Google (as with Facebook) makes most of its money - tracking over 70% of the web in order to feed its surveillance capitalism. In this case, it involves "In Cognito" mode. /2
Google had argued it warns users when they enter Incognito mode that their browsing activity can still be viewed by their employer/school, ISP or the sites they visit but guess who they didn't mention was still tracking them??? /3
upon request, a brief friday thread for those who have lost track of all of Meta/Facebook's significant legal and regulatory challenges from privacy and competition laws now converging. Hopefully this is a useful bookmark and happy to provide further links for any tweet. /1
Starting in DC, the US Federal Trade Commission is suing Facebook under antimonopoly laws to break up the company. The lawsuit 1:20-cv-03590-JEB was filed in Dec 2020 and has now moved into expert discovery with a Feb 2024 deadline. /2
also in DC, the FTC just ordered a show cause (Facebook response due Nov 30). The FTC is seeking to re-open Facebook's 2020 consent decree (in which it paid $5 billion avoiding its ceo being named and deposed) to prohibit basically its entire biz model with youth audiences. /3
Facebook, Facebook, Facebook…thanks to an exec whistleblower, we learned a tremendous amount how they planned for nearly a year to intimidate Australia govt. And we can anticipate as they take from the same playbook in Canada as new passed reducing their bargaining power. /1
So on friday, it was pretty clear there was a channel from facebook comms / execs / stirring up press. I saw it through media coverage and calls I received. They want to stir up the public based on their threat to block access to news. /2
We’ve also seen the same exact surrogates who testified unsuccessfully now use their social media accounts, blogs and substacks with the same talking points trying to stir up the same pot. Same people. Same witnesses. Same talking points. /3
when a former, trusted FTC Director says this, I dig in... "On a scale from one to 10, this is a 15. This is as great as any privacy breach that I’ve seen other than exploiting kids. This is a five-alarm fire, if what we know about this so far is true." a few quick comments. /1
you need to read the report, will link to it plus major press along with a final key point from me. but first, this does a great job explaining why you don't want adtech companies passing around hashed values under the guise of being privacy compliant. /2
in the case of Facebook, convincing you of this is a distraction as they then feed data into their data warehouses (eg Hive) and train their advertising and content micro-targeting engines. More on that in a minute. /3
Facebook PR had a masterpiece last week - thx to court decision on July 4th and PR mob to its new app launch (a ripoff of Twitter no matter what their friendlies say). Over weekend, I read arguably the most important court decision in Facebook's history so you don't have to. 1/9
Simply put, Facebook is screwed. It invalidates their core biz in one of their largest markets. That's all. And it was issued by the highest court in the EU after over four years of proceedings. Ultimately, it means the company's "surveillance" is gutted. A quick summary... 2/9
In 2019, Germany's federal cartel office ruled FB didn't have proper user consent for what drove its entire biz - microtargeting content and ads (97% of its revenues). An antimonopoly decision hadn't previously incorporated GDPR (privacy law) so ultimately it went up to CJEU. 3/9