Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

Google sets aside $500m for ad probe

Add as a preferred source on Google

google_logo_1024x426-2According to a report in the New York Times, the investigation centers on the advertising arm of the company, though the exact details of the situation are not clear. A comment from a Justice Department spokesman was not immediately forthcoming, the report said. Google also declined to comment.

The NYT report said that the Californian company made a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Tuesday which outlined Google’s intention to set aside the sum. The filing said: “In May 2011, in connection with a potential resolution of an investigation by the United States Department of Justice into the use of Google advertising by certain advertisers, we accrued $500 million for the three month period ended March 31, 2011.”

Recommended Videos

The filing continued: “Although we cannot predict the ultimate outcome of this matter, we believe it will not have a material adverse effect on our business, consolidated financial position, results of operations, or cash flows.”

According to the report, Google said that as a result of it having to set aside the money, the net income for the last quarter was 22 percent lower than it had originally reported, putting it at $1.8 billion (from $2.3 billion).

The issue remains largely a mystery for the time being, as we wait for the conclusion of the investigation by the Justice Department. As the NYT report says, it is not even clear to whom the money might be paid – the Justice Department or advertisers.

This news comes at a busy time for the search engine giant. Also on Tuesday, the company, along with Apple, was up in front of a Senate Judiciary panel defending the way in which it collects data from mobile phones.

On a brighter note for the Mountain View-based company, at its developer conference in San Francisco yesterday, Google unveiled the Honeycomb 3.1 OS, as well as its next mobile smartphone system, Ice Cream Sandwich. A new cloud-based music service was also announced.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Topics
Apple just raised the price of its products by hundreds of dollars
Apple shielded customers from memory costs longer than anyone. But the inevitable has happened.
iPadOS 27 on iPad

For months, the memory crisis was everyone else’s problem, but it didn't affect Apple. While smartphone and laptop makers quickly gave in, raising prices across their entry-level and flagship products, Apple stood strong, absorbing costs through long-term supplier deals that gave it leverage most brands simply didn’t have.

The situation, I fear, has gotten worse. Earlier today, the Cupertino giant revised the prices for multiple products, including the MacBooks, iPads, and Mac Studio. 

Read more
I found 2 Prime Day budget laptop deals that make sense for students, work, and everyday use
Best Prime Day laptop deals i found under $500
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Prime Day has no shortage of budget laptop deals, which makes it harder to tell which ones are actually worth buying. I sifted through the options and narrowed it down to two laptops that look like the best value picks if you need an affordable Windows machine for everyday work, school, browsing, streaming, and basic productivity.

ASUS Vivobook 14

Read more
This website publicly shames popular sites like Instagram, Netflix, and Spotify for being too lazy to add passkeys
Apple, Google, and Microsoft fully support passkeys, while companies like Netflix and Spotify have offered no explanation for the gap.
passkey

A new website is doing something many frustrated security experts have wanted for years. It is publicly naming big companies that still refuse to support passkeys. Called Why No Passkeys, the site tracks major platforms that continue to rely on old-school passwords even as passkeys become the safer option. If you use apps like Instagram, Netflix, or Spotify, you might be surprised to see them on the list.

The website was created by security researcher Scott Helme, who previously teamed up with Troy Hunt in 2017 to launch WhyNoHTTPS, a site that helped push much of the internet toward encrypted browsing.

Read more