|
|
|
|
|
by themacguffinman
1466 days ago
|
|
No it's not always tied to quality, it's just tied to what they want. If consumers don't prioritize quality, that's their rightful choice in the market, it's no one else's place to tell them what they should prioritize. Greater reach and resources is part & parcel of being the top consumer choice. If they blanket the airwaves, if there is some asymmetry, still who cares? You're going to have to show how consumers do not have a choice or how it doesn't help consumers. Because regardless of how intense Amazon's marketing and reach get, their competitors are still one click away. Finding out about competitors is one search query away, one media article away, or one advertisement away. Frankly, if a consumer is unable to expend the minimal effort to find & choose an Amazon competitor to buy a product, they're basically not trying at all. And not trying is their choice. |
|
As far as anti-competitive behavior, I will defer to luminaries more informed than I
https://www.yalelawjournal.org/note/amazons-antitrust-parado...
https://www.natlawreview.com/article/amazon-wins-ruling-resu...