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🌅 Google to Retire Ads Creative Studio in Q1 2025
Google has announced it will sunset Ads Creative Studio by the end of March 2025, urging advertisers to transition their workflows to third-party tools or partners. The platform, known for its YouTube and Display ad customization features, will no longer allow new project creation starting January 17, with complete deprecation set for March. Advertisers can still edit and export existing projects, add new assets, and manage users until the shutdown. Google recommends engaging third-party partners for YouTube customizations, while Display ads can still utilize Studio for non-dynamic and dynamic workflows or alternative solutions. To prepare for the transition, marketers should export assets, explore alternative platforms, and consult account managers for guidance.
🤖 Google Debuts AI Tool for Automated Ad Copy
Google's Marketing Solutions team has launched Copycat, a new open-source Python tool powered by Gemini AI to simplify ad copy creation for Google Search campaigns. Copycat analyzes top-performing ads, learns brand voice, and generates keyword-specific ad variations while ensuring campaign consistency. Designed for seamless integration, it works with Google Ads, Google Cloud Platform, Vertex AI, and Google Sheets. Advertisers can access Copycat via Jupyter Notebooks, Python scripts, or Google Sheets workflows. To maintain quality, the tool includes evaluation metrics like brand compliance checks, style similarity scoring, and keyword relevance analysis. With Copycat, Google aims to help advertisers scale their efforts while preserving creative integrity.
⚖️ Google's Adtech Monopoly Faces Antitrust Challenge
Google's alleged monopoly in the ad tech industry is under scrutiny as the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) wraps up arguments in a historic antitrust case. The government claims Google has abused its dominance, controlling 87% of the ad-selling tech market, to stifle competition and inflate profits at the expense of advertisers and publishers. The company's lead attorney argued that the government failed to prove its case, emphasizing that Google's tools have lowered costs and improved user quality. Meanwhile, the DOJ compared Google's dominance to a monopolistic stronghold, alleging anti-competitive behavior. The stakes are high. A ruling against Google could force a breakup of its $31 billion ad-tech business and set a legal precedent for regulating other tech giants like Amazon, Meta, and Apple.
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(via Search Engine Land, Christoph Scherf) *source links in the comment section 👇
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