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by gridlockd
2140 days ago
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> Particularly if they give products away for free to destroy the existing competition... You're thinking of predatory pricing, but he market price for a browser has been zero for a long time. Users chose to ditch Firefox and IE for Chrome because it was the better product. That's competition at work. The point of anti-trust is to protect the consumer, not the weak market participants. If tomorrow Google decided to do something to Chrome, that isn't in the consumer's interest, immediately the opportunity arises for competitors to outdo them - with their own code even. > ...or as a lead in to their existing profit-making product. Isn't that the point of most free products? I doubt there's an anti-trust case to be made there. |
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Surely Google wouldn't allocate ad-space preferentially to their own products, right?
And surely they wouldn't bug me for five plus years about how the internet is faster with Chrome?
Nah, that would never happen ;)