Google offers to let rival ad firms place ads on YouTube to address EU antitrust probe
- Google parent Alphabet is making the offer after the European Commission singled out Google’s requirement that advertisers use its Ad Manager on YouTube
- Google has been in talks about ways to avert a fine that could reach 10 per cent of turnover, but it will need to offer more than the YouTube remedy

The European Commission opened a probe last year to examine whether the world’s largest provider of search and video was giving itself an unfair advantage in digital advertising by restricting rivals’ and advertisers’ access to user data.
The EU competition watchdog singled out Google’s requirement that advertisers use its Ad Manager to display ads on YouTube and potential restrictions on the way in which rivals serve ads on YouTube.
It is also looking into Google’s requirement that advertisers use its services Display & Video 360 and Google Ads to buy YouTube ads. YouTube posted US$6.9 billion in sales in the first quarter of this year.
The Commission and Google, which has previously said publishers and advertisers often use multiple technologies and platforms to sell ads, declined to comment.
Google has been discussing remedies with the Commission since last year in a bid to avert a fine that could reach 10 per cent of its global turnover, a person familiar with the matter told Reuters last year.
The company will however need to offer more than just the YouTube remedy to address other concerns in order to get a deal, the people said, adding that talks seemed to be on the right track.