A U.S. federal judge has denied Google's motion to dismiss a Department of Justice antitrust case focused on advertising technology.
The government, which filed the ad tech lawsuit in January, has argued that Google should be forced to sell its ad manager suite. Google has denied any wrongdoing.
"I'm going to deny the defendant's motion to dismiss," Judge Leonie Brinkema said in a federal court in Virginia. Google is a unit of Alphabet Inc.
Google argued that the case should be thrown out because the government had erred in defining the online advertising market and improperly excluded powerful competitors such as Facebook. It also said that the government's estimate of Google's ad exchange as having "more than 50%" of the market fell short of the 70% needed to allege market power.
Google's motion is the company's latest effort to end costly, time-consuming antitrust lawsuits. It also asked a federal court in Washington to dismiss claims in a 2020 lawsuit filed by the government.


Expo City Dubai issues UAE’s first green licences
ADNOC Distribution to acquire South African fuel network in $1 billion deal
US judge rejects Elon Musk's bid to set aside Twitter fraud verdict
OPEC+ approves further output increase as Hormuz exports start to recover
UAE thwarts advanced cyberattacks targeting financial sector
