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Yes, but please note how you described it first: "Apple's control over its market." Inasmuch as its Apple's market, its theirs to do with as they please. The question is, is it Apple's market? Or is the market something bigger or smaller, or belong to someone else (iOS users, for example, or smartphone users), in which case their needs should be prioritized. Personally, I think Apple's too big, and I don't trust them (though my M1 Mac mini should arrive Tuesday nonetheless), and I think the government should act. That said, antitrust has generally been focused on acquisitions and mergers, which don't seem to be the issue in Apple's case. Apple has genuinely made a product, mostly on their own, that has attracted enough users that it's become a problem. This seems like a radically different issue from other large tech companies, most of which have very large acquisitions that could be--and should be--undone. And Epic is being disingenuous and inconsistent, and I don't think they're in the right here, either. |
No it is not.
> that has attracted enough users that it's become a problem.
That doesn't matter. People could make the same claims about microsoft, that it "created" it's own OS market.
But we all know how that went. Microsoft lost its anti trust case.
> antitrust has generally been focused on acquisitions and mergers
Or we could just look at the Microsoft case. The Microsoft case is directly applicable to Apples case.
It doesn't matter if microsoft or apple "created" the market for OSes. They can still have significant market power.
Imagine if Microsoft took the same exact actions that Apple did regarding app stores, on internet explorer.
Imagine that Microsoft prevented all 3rd party web browsers, and then charged a 30% fee to websites accessed through IE.
This would be clearly and obviously anti competitive. Why can't we use the same argument against Apple?