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by sfifs
2127 days ago
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The point of the anti-trust regulations is that some of these kinds of contract terms become illegal as market power increases - particularly contract terms around using dominance in one market to unfairly gain dominance in another market. Otherwise for instance you could have a dominant employer in your town (eg. A factory town) write into your employment contract that you can only buy household groceries from their own supermarket etc. These kinds of things actually happened at one point in history before the anti-trust regulations. A lot obviously depends on definition of the "markets" which is what anti-trust cases in practice largely revolve around. |
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Where is the monopoly here?
The service Apple has, is appealing to customers because they're aggressively protecting what is important to them, and using their fees to ensure they've got the resources to actually vet software, prevent abuses of customers, and make payment seamless.
If you don't like that, you're free to find software in many other forms.
But you don't want that, you want to have someone provide you all that, but without having to you know, pay for it.
Which is why the internet is an ad supported shit hole, and this is one place that is actually pretty great for customer experience.