It's dangerous to get to a single failure point by removing all of the alternatives, too. This is the mechanic people are concerned about with Amazon. No monopoly arises via incompetence of the monopolist
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Replying to @circulinear
It's very feasible to maintain a monopoly while being terrible at what you do if you're *not* terrible at fostering a regulatory environment in which it's functionally illegal to compete with you. That's a real danger. People patronizing businesses that perform great? Not so much
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Replying to @webdevMason @circulinear
As it stands, Amazon looks like a monopoly *because* it stands head and shoulders above other online retailers. They're still out there, and if they could execute like Amazon we'd probably be seeing some very interesting biz battles
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Replying to @webdevMason
Agreed that Amazon got to #1 by being simply better. Now, though, some believe they are retaining #1 with the help of (not exclusively due to) anticompetitive practices. Whether or not it's true, that's the argument against Amazon. Not, "it's a bad/useless service."
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Replying to @circulinear
Well, therein lies the rub. A popular narrative now is that no company could *possibly* dominate unless by anti-competitive practices, and that standard business practices suddenly fall into that basket as soon as a company cones out too far ahead.
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Replying to @webdevMason
Again, could be true, but this argument is still not tantamount to "Amazon is a bad service," and nor are the monopoly concerns allayed by points about how hard it was to Internet shop pre-Amazon, or how convenient it is in the middle of a pandemic (or any other point in time).
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Replying to @circulinear
If Amazon is an exceptional service, it really does undercut the claim that it must break the law to succeed. Monopoly concerns are allayed both by Amazon not being a monopoly and by Amazon not causing the problems monopolies tend to cause.
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Replying to @webdevMason @circulinear
Better than breaking the law is exploiting it. Amazon figured out that the US Postal service was a subsidy in search of a recipient.
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You're always going to have really weird arrangements emerge when entities that need to be profitable in order to exist collaborate with & compete with entities that need to look busy in order to exist
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