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by scarface74
2409 days ago
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Digital content distribution - as far as movies, music, and books anyone can put up a website, provision some servers and sell content in standardized formats that can be consumed anywhere. Search - nothing is stopping anyone from going to other search engines. It’s not like Bing is backed by one or two people with no financial backing. Social networking - the social networks pre- Facebook failed because people chose a better experience. On none of those cases are corporations forcing people to do anything nor or any of them essential services for which there is no alternative. And the “definition” does matter. Once people in power can make up their own definitions it leads to government overreach. |
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Currently, that seems unrealistic in some areas like app stores where you can see egregious misuse of dominant market positions.
It's ineffective in other areas like social networks because all new market entrants are swiftly taken over by incumbents without any resistance by regulators.
The definition of monopoly is important in some respects but not for the question of whether or not we can reap the benefits of markets or suffer the consequences of dysfunctional markets. It doesn't take a clearcut monopoly to render a market dysfunctional.
(I'm not sure which people in power you are talking about)