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by rocket_surgeron
1221 days ago
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I don't know if I would characterize them as having monopoly control of the market because nearly 100% of all of my purchases are made online and 0.0% of my purchases have been made using amazon.com (or walmart.com). Generally speaking I prefer to buy a product directly, or from a specialized retailer. Last week I purchased a stethoscope from an online stethoscope retailer. A benefit of doing this is that they offer laser engraving-- something that Amazon, with its warehouses of robots and robot-like employees, cannot easily do. The specialty retailer also carries a wider array of color and finish combinations, because that's their product niche. Using a specialist retailer has allowed me to flex on my fellow volunteer EMTs with a personalized Technicolor stethoscope, which is dumb but nice. |
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For examples, do the 7 bigges supermarkets in britain, Tesco, Lidl, etc, have a monopoly?
I can buy all my food from the snaller shops and market markets, as a buyer.
But if I am a seller, and I need to sell mass market food, and all the big supermarkets refuse to carry it, you will go bankrupt.