A 4-1 vote by the Federal Trade Commission wraps up its eight-month investigation of antitrust concerns over Google's purchase of DoubleClick and approves the acquisition.
Google expected the DoubleClick buy to gain approval by the end of 2007. Eric Schmidt and company probably did not think it would happen with only eleven days to go in the year.
But it has, leaving the European Commission's review and commentary on the deal the next issue pending for the two companies. The
Chairman Deborah Platt Majoras and Commissioners Jon Leibowitz, William E. Kovacic and J. Thomas Rosch voted in favor of the pact. Majoras had been pressured to Jones Day scrubbed its site of all DoubleClick references. Though the FTC found that Google likely would not be able to affect market power in third-party ad serving, the Commissioners did say "We want to be clear, however, that we will closely watch these markets and, should Google engage in unlawful tying or other anticompetitive conduct, the Commission intends to act quickly." Commissioner Jon Leibowitz published a concurring statement, echoing Harbour's concerns:(T)he serious vertical competition issues raised by Google’s proposed acquisition of DoubleClick as well as the substantial privacy issues that, though in part brought to light by the deal, clearly transcend it. Ultimately, reasonable people - and Commissioners - may disagree about whether to approve this merger, but most everyone should agree that consumer privacy needs to be better protected in the online behavioral marketing arena.
With this decision, the FTC has left that protection up to the private sector. Perhaps they feel
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