KEY POINTS
  • USA Today publisher Gannett is suing Google for allegedly illegally monopolizing the advertising technology market.
  • The lawsuit echoes arguments made by the U.S. Department of Justice in its second lawsuit against Google.
  • "Google has monopolized market trading to their advantage and at the expense of publishers, readers and everyone else," Gannett Chairman and CEO Michael Reed said in a statement.

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Gannett-USA Today headquarters building in McLean, Virginia.

USA Today publisher Gannett is suing Google for allegedly illegally monopolizing the advertising technology market, adding to an already-extensive list of lawsuits against the company for alleged anti-competitive behavior.

"With control over the largest ad exchange and ad server — both of which Google acquired rather than developed — Google has carried out a sophisticated, anticompetitive, and deceptive scheme for well over a decade," Gannett argued in a complaint filed in the Southern District of New York on Tuesday. The publisher said Google's broad control of the ad tech market has hurt news publishers, claiming online readership has grown while online ad spending has decreased for publishers.

In this article