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by simonh
1750 days ago
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Not at all, there was nothing inevitable about Apple's success, many analysts, pundits and their competitors have been adamant Apple would fail for the first decade or so of the iPhone. After that these claims started looking a bit thin. You're presuming that market abuse has occurred and that market abuse is the only way to get popular, but I don't see that's a given. Maybe people simply genuinely like iPhones just the way they are, and maybe network effects just legitimately lead to the most popular platforms dominating. Apple don't have a monopoly on the phone market anyway, they only have 27% of the South Korean phone market. In the US it's 65%, high but not a monopoly, but it only went over 50% in 2020. What changed to make them a market abuser and when did it happen, as you allege? That's the question OP is asking. |
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There is no clear line or answer, as the topic is incredibly complex.
Electronic devices are not just gadgets anymore, but tools to participate in modern life. We never had that situation before.
So by traditional meassures like absolute market share, apple might not be a monopolist, but because of the massive lock in and market dominance (of the luxory segment), with all its implications, I surely would say they abuse their power since a long time. But I also do not believe in regulations as the magic bullet to really solve it, exactly because the lines are too blurry.