I'm genuinely shocked at the lack of quality discussion here. Did anyone actually try reading the article? The concept here is not to obfuscate things but rather to de-couple Google's search engine and Google's Adwords products.
Most opinion in this thread is "lol alphabet is google" which is apparent to everyone. Of course they are functionally the same entity, but someone whose job depends on it has proposed this as a solution. Are we really to assume that they just woke up and decided to turn their brain off? There's clearly going to be some actual change that attempts to satisfy regulators here.
We can look at history and possibly speculate how this looks, and we can also identify a few things.
1. Google is a search engine
2. Google the company sells AdWords as a product to advertisers.
3. Google benefits tremendously from owning both of these things.
Here's my take: Google wants to decouple their search and ads teams, move ads to a separate entity that works as an advertising marketplace, generate revenue there. Search will now sell its advertising space, likely in a way that can also be taxed, to the highest bidder rather than itself.
I also predict that google will want to pressure other platforms, which will enable them to break into other markets. META is the second largest advertiser online, but they do all of their advertising on two platforms, Instagram and Facebook. If google can push for the forced decoupling, then it will likely also apply to META. They can then swing their AdsWords product on top of FB/IG and start to eat back some of the traffic that they have been losing in recent years[1]. It's a bit of a gamble, but Google is betting on their AdWords software to be stronger, and a lot of the history would agree.
Also, now that I think about it, this has pretty big implications for user data sharing cross platform. Now you have to formalize the way that personal information is exchanged for the purpose of advertising.
> [...] but rather to de-couple Google's search engine and Google's Adwords products.
I don't think this is what this is about. From what I understand, this is specifically about Google Ad Exchange (which is for display ads not on Google properties).
The problem that a lot of people have is that Google both runs the auction for many ad networks, and puts bids in the auction as part of Google Display Network. The accusations are that Google's Ad Exchange favors Google Display Network.
The proposal is about spinning the Ad Exchange as another Alphabet company.
Because we have seen decades of organizations lying and bullshitting, they have no credibility whatsoever. There is already a lawsuit against them for rigging auctions[1], and a DoJ antitrust case [2] against them.
As long as both continue to be owned by the same parent organization, there is no trusting that they will not collude when the stakes are high enough.
Heck there is even a lawsuit of independent companies colluding to suppress wages in 2014 that [3]. One of these companies was.. Google. Even after they lost the case, the average payout was around $3800 for a class made up mostly of software engineers.
We get it, but many think that this is an attempt to appear to decouple the search engine and the Adwords projects. People on both sides of the divide will be partly compensated with stock in the parent company, so everyone's financial incentives will still be to maximize profit for Google plus Alphabet/AdWords. So the "independent" company may still favor Google products.
But I suppose putting AdWords in a separate division might make it easier for antitrust regulators (US, EU or both) to pressure the company into a true spinoff (into a truly independent company).
Did you read the article? This isn’t about not maximizing alphabets profits. The issue is with how the current add exchange favors Google’s web products despite not all ads being ran on google. This solution moves the ad exchange to its own business entity which would decouple it from .com
Both enities will be under common owenership. Does the search business share data with the ads business. If yes, I fail to see how this levels the playing field.
Please explain.
Google wants to make concessions before they have even been sued. DOJ has yet to file a complaint. This is a defendant with "limitless" resources to defend itself against meritless claims. To me, this suggests culpability.
Corporations have so much more slack than people. If got caught serially robbing banks I don’t think the justice department would accept my personal 5 point plan to cut down on heists.
I think people are understandable my skeptical that a megacorp with a known history of anticompetitive behavior will propose a solution that is effective at stopping its only monopoly.
It's very rare for corporations to do things as clearly illegal as robbing banks would be. Instead, this sort of dispute with regulators is typically around borderline activities. Since the final word on what is allowed or not in any given situation belongs to the regulator, it's common for companies to propose various solutions to see if a regulator would find them sufficient.
(Disclosure: I used to work for Google, in the part that this is talking about separating)
> Are we really to assume that they just woke up and decided to turn their brain off? There's clearly going to be some actual change that attempts to satisfy regulators here.
Though I don't claim to fully understand what the genuine legal ramifications would be (partly because the proposal, as described in the Ars article, is quite vague), saying that the only reasons someone would propose this would be if it's Totally Obviously Fine or if they need their heads examining seems quite naïve.
First of all, we've seen plenty of instances of fairly high-profile companies trying to get around regulations in ways that are (effectively) laughed out of the room by regulators.
We've also seem similar instances where we the tech-savvy (and largely non-lawyer) public would laugh them out of the room, but the regulators took them 100% seriously and didn't question their (to us) obvious deception at all.
Given how vague the article is, this could even be an attempt to float this idea through the press to see how people and the DoJ react before making the proposal formally.
I think in short, the problem is that decoupling anything from Google by putting it under Alphabet doesn't pass the sniff test, but if you're looking at things from a super pedantic perspective, you could think it might fly to a court.
You have too much faith in companies that set up elaborate offshore entities in tax havens just to escape paying any taxes in the countries they actually operate out of.
Ever wonder why all these honest and upstanding companies seem to have their HQs in Ireland of all places?
Thats quite a straw man. There's a pretty big difference between using a benefit as intended and taking advantages of loopholes in tax law by creating multiple shell entities around the globe. You can argue they have a duty to shareholders to optimize profits, but let's not pretend it's the same thing as paying your taxes as the law intended.
As a US citizen you can't declare your income was earned in Ireland and avoid or reduce paying US federal income tax. You can't avoid US federal income tax even if you lived in Ireland and worked for an Irish company for that year.
You can't just renounce it. It's a quite expensive process. And naturally, once you have, you no longer receive any of the benefits of US citizenship. Whereas the companies in question get to avoid taxes while retaining the benefits of being located in the US.
They're not doing business with another company in any meaningful sense. There's multiple companies set up with the same owners so they can pretend the one in the lower tax region makes all of the revenue, often through IP licenses that look like expenses to the entity in the higher tax region. It's financial engineering that doesn't reflect where value is actually being created or revenue captured.
I'm not a CPA, but my understanding is as a US citizen, your closest analog would be setting up an irrevocable trust. But, then you no longer have control of those assets. Owners of these shell corporations are able to effectively control their assets. Naturally, if they were legitimately doing business with a 3rd party company, they'd have no say over what that other company can do with their revenue. That's a key difference between what's a normal business operation and what's a shell game for tax avoidance.
I still don't see how you would separate legitimate use of the law from illegitimate if both cases follow the letter of the law. In the case of the double Irish, it's largely irrelevant because the US law was fixed under Trump, as was the Irish law. Even before, us owners of alphabet had to pay capital gains on any realized tax so there was way for an individual to profit.
I imagine we will have trouble finding common ground given that I think corporate taxation is a bad way to collect revenue to begin with.
> Did anyone actually try reading the article? The concept here is not to obfuscate things but rather to de-couple Google's search engine and Google's Adwords products.
But the entire latter half of the article is dedicated to explaining how the proposed change is superficial and doesn't address the regulator's concerns. It asks, "Is there a difference between 'Google' and 'Alphabet?'" and the article's conclusion is basically a no.
yes, because no Alphabet employee will ever talk to a Googs employee where one happens to work in ads and the other in search. Those conversations will never happen to discuss things that could work for the betterment of either/both.
do you really think that Alphabet would do anything to lower their profits by making ads less viable and search less ad driven?
Add this topic to the ever growing list of topics that are just blind faith nonsense every time they come up. See also:
- Apple
- Elon Musk
- Electron
- React
- Intelligence agencies
- Cryptocurrency
- Literally anything outside of tech where you just have a huge swath of people confidently expressing what they consider to be fundamental truths without actually understanding the basics of the topic.
Most opinion in this thread is "lol alphabet is google" which is apparent to everyone. Of course they are functionally the same entity, but someone whose job depends on it has proposed this as a solution. Are we really to assume that they just woke up and decided to turn their brain off? There's clearly going to be some actual change that attempts to satisfy regulators here.
We can look at history and possibly speculate how this looks, and we can also identify a few things.
1. Google is a search engine
2. Google the company sells AdWords as a product to advertisers.
3. Google benefits tremendously from owning both of these things.
Here's my take: Google wants to decouple their search and ads teams, move ads to a separate entity that works as an advertising marketplace, generate revenue there. Search will now sell its advertising space, likely in a way that can also be taxed, to the highest bidder rather than itself.
I also predict that google will want to pressure other platforms, which will enable them to break into other markets. META is the second largest advertiser online, but they do all of their advertising on two platforms, Instagram and Facebook. If google can push for the forced decoupling, then it will likely also apply to META. They can then swing their AdsWords product on top of FB/IG and start to eat back some of the traffic that they have been losing in recent years[1]. It's a bit of a gamble, but Google is betting on their AdWords software to be stronger, and a lot of the history would agree.
Also, now that I think about it, this has pretty big implications for user data sharing cross platform. Now you have to formalize the way that personal information is exchanged for the purpose of advertising.
[1] https://www.statista.com/statistics/242549/digital-ad-market...