CCI Dismisses Ad Manipulation Complaint Against Google, Amazon, Flipkart
According to recent reports, the Competition Commission of India has dismissed allegations of large-scale digital ad manipulation against major technology platforms, stating that the complaint lacked concrete evidence and failed to establish abuse of dominance under Indian competition law.
Why the CCI Dismissed the Complaint
The Competition Commission of India ruled that the allegations did not meet the legal threshold required to initiate a formal antitrust investigation.
The regulator noted that claims of manipulation in online advertising systems were broad, unsupported by verifiable data, and failed to demonstrate immediate competitive harm.
Allegations Raised by the Complainant
The complaint was filed by the Alliance of Digital India Foundation, which alleged abuse of dominance by large digital platforms.
It claimed that advertising policies and systems unfairly restricted access to customers, capital, and growth opportunities for smaller businesses operating in India’s digital ecosystem.
CCI’s Findings on Google Ads Practices
While examining the allegations against Google, the CCI reiterated that advertisers and platforms are free to terminate their relationships at any time.
The regulator also rejected concerns around Google’s ad “Quality Score,” stating that sufficient performance data is already disclosed to advertisers, consistent with earlier rulings.
Reliance on Existing Legal Precedents
The CCI referred to its earlier decisions, including cases where similar allegations against Google’s advertising systems had already been examined and settled.
It concluded that the current complaint did not present materially new issues warranting re-investigation under Section 26 of the Competition Act.
Role of Other Digital Platforms
The complaint also named Amazon, Flipkart, and other ad-tech participants.
However, the regulator found no prima facie evidence of coordinated manipulation or abuse of dominance across these platforms.
Dissenting View Within the Commission
A single CCI member issued a dissent note, suggesting that certain operational aspects deserved deeper scrutiny.
This included advertiser account terminations and support mechanisms, though the majority ruled that these concerns alone did not justify reopening the case.
Broader Regulatory Context for Google
The dismissal comes amid ongoing regulatory scrutiny of Google across multiple verticals, including mobile ecosystems, app distribution, and smart TV platforms.
The CCI has previously imposed fines and approved settlements in separate matters, underscoring a case-by-case enforcement approach rather than blanket action.
What This Means for India’s Digital Ad Market
The ruling reinforces the CCI’s evidence-driven standard for competition enforcement in digital markets.
For advertisers and platforms, it signals that regulatory intervention will depend on demonstrable harm and substantiated claims—not speculative or generalized allegations.
Industry Perspective
Digilogy tracks these regulatory developments closely as part of its ongoing analysis of India’s evolving digital advertising and competition landscape.
For daily updates and insights, visit the Digilogy News page.



