They pretty clearly have a monopoly on iOS app stores.
Now we can skip the part where somebody says that you can't have a monopoly on your own product and then I point out that monopolies always look like that because their product is the only one in the market, and the reason that android app stores and iOS app stores are different markets is that you can't install Android apps on iOS devices or vice versa.
> Now we can skip the part where somebody says that you
> can't have a monopoly on your own product
No, we actually cannot skipt that part.
Or maybe we can skip the part where you are human and not a camel and then discuss how many days can you spend in a desert without water?
We can skip (could have skipped?) that part because I already posted the rebuttal:
> monopolies always look like that because their product is the only one in the market, and the reason that android app stores and iOS app stores are different markets is that you can't install Android apps on iOS devices or vice versa.
I feel like it's worth pointing out that in the industry that spurred the development of anti-monopoly legislation, there were ~20 major companies. Or ~150, if you go by the definition of "large" established ~30 years later. (By either definition, there's 7 today in the same industry, if you're wondering).
> Surely by moving the goalposts you can make everything look like a monopoly.
Walmart doesn't have a monopoly on SAE 5w30 motor oil. You can't make it look like a monopoly when it isn't one, because when it isn't you can identify competitors who sell substitute products to the same customers.
> In the end both mobile platforms have practically the same popular apps.
The market they have a monopoly on is iOS app stores, not individual apps.
It's very straight forward. For Google Play to be in the same market you would have to be able to use it to install apps on your Apple iPhone. Since you can't, it isn't, and since there is only one app store that can, it's a monopoly.
Notice that it has nothing to do with the fact that Apple also makes the phones, outside of control over the phone being used to enforce the app store monopoly by locking out competitors. If Amazon for some reason had the only app store for Apple iOS devices, they would be the one with a monopoly in that market.
Now we can skip the part where somebody says that you can't have a monopoly on your own product and then I point out that monopolies always look like that because their product is the only one in the market, and the reason that android app stores and iOS app stores are different markets is that you can't install Android apps on iOS devices or vice versa.