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by fauigerzigerk
2409 days ago
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It doesn't matter what people could do in purely technical terms. What matters is whether there is an economically viable way to enter a market and create real competition. It's not a theoretical question. It has to actually happen for the benefits of free markets to accrue. 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) |
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You act as if it isn’t the goal of every startup that takes VC funding to get acquired. Yeah going public is the other route, but statistically it hardly ever happens. Look no further than YC. Only two YC backed companies have ever gone public.
VCs wouldn’t invest in companies if they thought their only exit strategy was navigating via the very unlikely road of going public. If it were harder to sell a company to a larger tech company, most of these investments would never happen.
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.
Facebook came in and took on MySpace with a better product - not government regulation.
I'm not sure which people in power you are talking about
The government. Everyone likes government power as long as their side is in charge.