Rules for Digital Advertising should Protect Businesses, Personal Data
16:36 JST, February 22, 2021
In the expanding digital advertising market, the adverse effects of an oligopoly by tech giants have become conspicuous. The government must clarify the rules and improve the situation.
The Japan Fair Trade Commission has released a final report summarizing the problems of advertisements displayed online. The report presented cases that possibly violate the Antimonopoly Law, urging tech companies to take voluntary action.
Tech giants such as Google LLC and Facebook Inc., both headquartered in the United States, collect vast amounts of information such as users’ ages and browsing histories through their search engines and social media, and utilize such information to deliver digital ads tailored to individual preferences.
The report argues that there is a lack of transparency in advertising fees and the way advertising is displayed, making it difficult to know such factors as on which site ads are shown, meaning that fair competition could be distorted.
The report said that if tech companies unilaterally change their contracts with business partners such as ad agencies it could constitute an “abuse of a superior bargaining position.”
It is reasonable to restrict such a practice. A new law came into effect this month to make online shopping and other transactions facilitated by tech giants more transparent. Discussions are ongoing within the government to have digital advertising covered by the law as well.
Under the new law, tech companies are required to disclose information and respond to complaints from business operators, and they have to regularly report on how they dealt with such matters. It is hoped the law will be effective in protecting internet users and business partners in the field of digital advertising.
The domestic digital advertising market doubled over five years to reach about ¥2 trillion in 2019, and it has become a source of revenue for tech companies. Google accounts for about 80% of search engine market share, and its business partners are reportedly frustrated by the situation, making such complaints as, “We have no choice but to comply with its requests.”
The report also expressed concern that tech companies are using personal data in advertising without fully explaining how it is used. According to the JFTC, less than 10% of all people have read the terms of service.
Tech companies need to make every effort to have people gain an understanding of data collection by making it easy to understand. They should make more user-friendly systems for users to reject the use of their personal information.
The more times a website is visited, the better reputation it gets, generating more advertising revenue for tech companies and others.
The report noted that inaccurate information and fake news can spread in an attempt to attract attention, making it difficult for accurate news to be displayed and potentially disadvantaging users.
The report proposes that tech companies explicitly state the source of the content displayed and show stories that have a high degree of reliability higher up in search results. To improve the quality of information on the internet, tech companies should put efforts into their own reforms.
— The original Japanese article appeared in The Yomiuri Shimbun on Feb. 22, 2021.
"Editorial & Columns" POPULAR ARTICLE
-
Japan-China Public Opinion Poll: Fake Information Might Be Worsening Chinese People’s View of Japan
-
Life with Interest Rates: Turn Benefits to Household Finances into Virtuous Economic Cycle
-
Semiconductor Strategy: Steadily Establish Domestic Production of Next-Generation Products
-
LDP’s Minority Govt Sets Stage For ‘3rd Pole Era’; Political History Suggests Instability Will Result
-
Emissions Trading: Encourage Companies to Reduce Their CO2 Emissions
JN ACCESS RANKING
- Japan’s Kansai Economic Delegation Meets China Vice Premier, Confirm Cooperation; China Called to Expand Domestic Demand
- Yomiuri Stock Index to Launch in March; 333 Companies to be Equally Weighted
- China to Test Mine for Rare Metals Off Japan Island; Japan Lagging in Technologies Needed for Extraction
- Miho Nakayama, Japanese Actress and Singer, Found Dead at Her Tokyo Residence; She was 54 (UPDATE 1)
- Risk of Nuclear Weapons Being Used Greater Than Ever; Support Growing in Russia As Ukraine War Continues