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by placatedmayhem
877 days ago
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Offering a product for free or a significant discount with another product where a company has a substantial portion of that market to get a foothold and kill off competition in the free-/cheap-product's market is called "bundling" in anticompetitive regulations. Indeed, this is exactly what is happening with Teams compared to, say, Slack (which is generally regarded as the better team chat) or Zoom (better video conferencing). Read more here: https://www.ftc.gov/advice-guidance/competition-guidance/gui... |
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> For competitive purposes, a monopolist may use forced buying, or "tie-in" sales, to gain sales in other markets where it is not dominant and to make it more difficult for rivals in those markets to obtain sales. This may limit consumer choice for buyers wanting to purchase one ("tying") product by forcing them to also buy a second ("tied") product as well.
Teams is free, whether it’s obtained with Office or downloaded separately.
Giving away a product for free doesn’t violate anti competition regulations.