Source: ABC News
The U.S. government is moving forward with a remedies trial against Google in one of the most consequential antitrust cases in modern tech history. Scheduled for September 22, 2025, the trial will determine how to address Google's illegal dominance in the digital advertising ecosystem — a sector that generates over $220 billion annually in the U.S. alone.
The upcoming trial follows a ruling by U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema in Alexandria, Virginia, who declared that Google had “willfully acquired and maintained monopoly power” through anticompetitive practices in the online advertising market. This decision could reshape the future of digital ads — and Google's role in them.
In her April ruling, Judge Brinkema found that Google unlawfully leveraged its position as both a seller and buyer intermediary by tightly integrating its publisher ad server (DFP) with its ad exchange (AdX). This integration gave the tech giant near-total control over the supply chain of digital advertising, making it nearly impossible for competitors to operate on a level playing field.
“For more than a decade,” Brinkema wrote, “Google has tied its publisher ad server and ad exchange together through contractual obligations and technical restrictions, granting it unmatched control over both ends of the ad transaction.”
According to the Department of Justice, this has allowed Google to extract excessive fees, manipulate auction outcomes, and undermine competition, especially from smaller platforms and independent publishers. The remedies trial will explore possible solutions, including a forced divestiture of Google’s ad tech business — an aggressive move that the company staunchly opposes.
This case follows another landmark antitrust decision from August 2024, when Judge Amit Mehta ruled that Google held a monopoly in internet search, a market generating $175 billion annually. That case is currently in its remedies phase as well, taking place in Washington, D.C.
Judge Mehta wrote, “Google is a monopolist, and it has acted as one to maintain its monopoly,” after weighing extensive evidence and witness testimony. Combined, these cases represent the most sweeping federal challenge to a tech monopoly since the Microsoft antitrust case over two decades ago.
The DOJ’s position reflects a broader push by regulators to rein in Big Tech's growing dominance — a movement gaining bipartisan momentum across the U.S. and echoed in Europe’s Digital Markets Act.
In a statement released following the judge’s findings, Google Vice President of Regulatory Affairs Lee-Anne Mulholland criticized the DOJ’s proposed remedies, stating that the company’s internal solutions already address the court’s concerns.
“Today, the DOJ conceded that Google’s proposed ad tech remedy fully addresses the Court’s decision on liability,” said Mulholland. “The DOJ’s additional proposals to force a divestiture of our ad tech tools go far beyond the Court’s findings, lack a legal basis, and would ultimately harm publishers and advertisers.”
Google argues that separating its ad tech stack would disrupt the digital ad ecosystem, increase costs for businesses, and reduce the efficiency that has made online advertising more accessible to small and medium enterprises.
While defending itself in court, Google is also under pressure from competitors in the generative AI race — particularly from OpenAI (backed by Microsoft), Anthropic (backed by Amazon), and Perplexity AI. These companies are rapidly developing alternative search models, posing a threat to Google's core search and ad revenue streams.
Meanwhile, advertisers and publishers are increasingly exploring multi-platform strategies and server-side header bidding solutions to circumvent Google’s dominance. Industry leaders like The Trade Desk and PubMatic have gained traction as independent alternatives.
The remedies trial beginning on September 22 will be closely watched by regulators, advertisers, investors, and tech companies around the world. The outcome could lead to:
Analysts say that if the DOJ succeeds in breaking up Google’s ad stack, it could cause short-term volatility in Google’s parent company Alphabet’s stock (NASDAQ: GOOGL), but also open up new opportunities for competitors and reduce barriers to entry in digital media.
The Google ad tech trial marks a defining moment in how regulators confront digital monopolies in the 21st century. With billions in ad dollars and the balance of online power hanging in the balance, September’s remedies trial could set a lasting precedent not just for Google, but for the entire internet economy.