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Old 06-13-09, 01:11 PM   #1
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Originally Posted by Letum View Post
Why is that a bad thing?

The alternative is to ship the OS with no browser and no way to get a
browser other than through buying a CD with one one. That would be no good
for anyone, least of all MS.
Nonsens.

You can download the browser of your choice freely from the web. Choose Firebird, if you want. Or Explorer, if you prefer. Or Chrome, if you do not care for privacy. All that is okay with me.

Just that Microsoft is expected to help distributing competing Chrome and Firebird, that is what finds my rejection, since it seems to establiosh a dangerous, unwanted precedent.

I expect supervising authorities to prevent companies establishing monopoles. I do not expect companies to damage themseolves by selling/distributing the products of their rivals.
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Old 06-13-09, 01:45 PM   #2
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Originally Posted by Skybird View Post
You can download the browser of your choice freely
Well, you can, but most people just stick with whatever the first browser to
come along with. Microsoft abuse their position as a software distributor by
guaranteeing that that browser is IE.

Quote:
I do not expect companies to damage themseolves by selling/distributing the products of their rivals.
I expect companies to do what ever is good for competition and thus good for
the consumer.
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Old 06-13-09, 01:53 PM   #3
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I guess the thing I find odd is that now Microsoft will continue to be the villian even though the EU anti-trust system manufactured the issue and now doesn't like the outcome. Didn't they see this coming or did they think it would never happen? Boggles the mind.

Another example of mis-management by crisis. The EU regulators seem to be as good as US regulators.
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Old 06-13-09, 02:14 PM   #4
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Well, you can, but most people just stick with whatever the first browser to
come along with. Microsoft abuse their position as a software distributor by
guaranteeing that that browser is IE.
Yes, and the EU was right to end that. Now, Microsoft leaves the choice of browsers to the user of windows, since they must download one anyway.

Or do we now expect Microsoft to bundle Windows with Linux...?


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I expect companies to do what ever is good for competition and thus good for
the consumer.
Me too, but in capitalistic thinking, competition is not really wanted, while having a monopoly is the ideal. Consumers and producers are natural enemies over this point.

However, it is unreasonable to expect one competitor to assist his direct rival. That's like one runner helping his rival over the hurdles. We can demand him to not hinder the others, and not to use bad tricks, and by creating fair market access for all (in ideal situation: equal market access for all). But while we should make sure that all horses find the way to the water, I doubt that we should try to make them drink. That'S something each horse has to do all by itself. And if it doesn't - that's its own problem.
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Old 06-13-09, 05:22 PM   #5
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They are only assisting to the point of giving fair, assessable and informed
choice.

The objective of the corporate 100m hurdles is not for the best company to
win, but for several companies to compete against each other as best they
can so that no one can afford to slacken the pace.
If one competitor is running the 100m hurdles in the rally car of universal
software distribution, then it is quite right that the competition should be
maintained by removing that advantage by any means necessary.
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Old 06-13-09, 06:10 PM   #6
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They are only assisting to the point of giving fair, assessable and informed
choice.
The coice is there for customers already, and with Explorer no longer be part of Windows, the comfort-argument that people would stay with explorer for reasons of laziness, does not work anymore.

No need why one company should actively assist the other company at its own cost. That is not what market competition is about. microsoft offers Explorer as a separate download. Mozilla offers firebird as a separate download. and so on. Issue solved. No need for the state to overgovern things over nothing.

I see you are determined to push this up to the realms of absurdity again. So I leave here.
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Old 06-13-09, 06:22 PM   #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Letum
I expect companies to do what ever is good for competition and thus good for the consumer.
That kind of thinking is the fastest road to monopoly and oligopoly you can take besides simply nationalizing an industry.

While it sounds rational enough on the surface, the reality is that instead of barring companies from the power to create a monopoly, you just opened the door for them. Business' single favorite method of creating a monopoly is to use the power of the state to do it.
In the most common cases, businesses help legislatures to establish strict sets of regulatory, licensure, and legal standards for their own industry, shutting out a good deal of would-be entrepeneurs who cannot compete for lack of capital. Even when these entrepeneurs secure enough investors to get started, the state punishes them heavily by exacerbating their overhead costs through taxation.
Is it any wonder so many new companies fail so quickly? Of course, big business with a place secured by the state is always there to pick up the pieces afterwards if there is anything of value.

Another common usage of the state is for subsidization and penalization of the competition. Especially international competition. Who is always at the forefront of efforts to 'protect' national interests and jobs? All they really want to do is gain an unfair advantage over competitors. The same company that lobbies heavily to protect jobs through subsidization or tariffs will gladly cut or export ten thousand jobs the next year if that is deemed necessary to maintain healthy profitability.

Of course, there are thousands of other ways that business takes advantage of the state at the expense of the consumer and the taxpayer every year, not just these, but the point is that once you give government anything other than very strictly limited power over business in any capacity, you give business power over the state, especially in a democractic government and doubly so in multinational legislatures. The desire to guide the actions of the free market is a pandora's box that is not easily shut once it has been opened.
It is best to limit the state's power over business to the judicial realm, punishing fraud, theft, breach of contract, false advertising, harmful products, workplace abuses, and the like (only after they have been committed). While that still leaves a crack for business to exploit, it is a very small one. The threshold that must not be crossed is proactive government interference in the market.

In this particular case, Microsoft's most likely response will be to simply make their OS more expensive for consumers in the short term. In the long term, I have no idea what machinations they may put in place, but I assure you that they will totally sidestep the intent of this legislation.
Like bureacrats and politicians, the sole reason for my professional exsistence is not to evaluate potential market strategies for Microsoft.
However, the best thing to do imo, is to simply let Microsoft's natural monopoly run its' course, and give it no cause to intervene in state affairs. If people begin crying out for an alternative where none is to be found due to lack of competition, the state can always fall back on punitive trust-busting measures.

Perhaps you still see things differently, but I invite you to consider the wisdom of letting an entity that is almost universally detested for being incompetent, slow, corrupt, and inefficient, match wits with the best and brightest that private industry has to offer. I can assure you that business will beat the state every time and establish a shadow (and sometimes, overt) plutocracy, unless the state steps in and runs business entirely, which is tantamount to national fiscal suicide.
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Old 06-13-09, 06:47 PM   #8
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I can assure you that business will beat the state every time and establish a shadow (and sometimes, overt) plutocracy
That's more than a bit of an overstatement, don't you think?
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Old 06-13-09, 07:32 PM   #9
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That's more than a bit of an overstatement, don't you think?
Not particularly. The U.S. Federal Reserve is a sterling example. Although it was abolished (or rather, did not have its' charter renewed) by President Andrew Jackson's administration in the 1820's, it resurfaced in the early 20th century and is now the determining factor in Global Economic policy. Despite what it may sound like, and despite the fact that the Federal Reserve does have a state-appointed board of trustees (sort of), it is still very much a private entity.
Other examples include the rail Baronies of the late 19th century, which experienced their heydey after the creation of the Interstate Commerce Commission in the late 1880's. Despite the fact that the rail Baronies were 'broken up' and consumers were 'protected' by the activities of the ICC( which became the surface transportation board in the 90's under Clinton, and a Republican Congress, with even more power), it did nothing to change the fact that within 50 years, the U.S. rail industry was reduced to only 5 Class-1 railroads(down from almost a dozen), and within 100 years to only 3, the two largest of which are practically the same company, so cemented are the policies by which they conduct their trade.
To this day the major rail companies routinely deliver goods late and at inflated prices because they are so protected. There only competition is the horribly inefficient trucking industry, which has become non competitive due to rising fuel prices, which have been exacerbated by (guess what!?) higher fuel taxes, which the freight rail industry lobbied for in the guise of promoting public transportation, which they provide 0% of.

There are many, many, more examples here in the U.S that I can name off the top of my head; the aluminum industry, the agricultural industry, the steel industry, the lumber industry, the automotive industry, etc. etc. ad nauseum. I'm not particularly familiar with European state intitiatives but judging by what I have seen of the budget outlays(not to mention the insane taxes you pay and the insane prices for goods, and the lower standard of living) for Germany and the U.K. alone, I suspect that I'd have no trouble at all locating a wealth of plutocratic state-industrial combines controlling many sectors of E.U. industry.

So again, I do not think it is an overstatement at all, especially not in the context of Europe, a continent which has largely been fiscally re-invented since the end of the Second World War. It took the U.S. over a century, to really get started on the path to fiscal liberalism and plutocracy, and still another half-century before it really began to manifest itself. Europe launched into the fallacy of "Social Democractic" economics after barely a decade, less in some cases, and if GDP per Capita and PPP per capita are any kind of indicators, is hell-bent on becoming a plutocracy with a vast wealth gap and a massvie international defecit as soon as possible.

I think that the U.K., and the rest of the E.U. nations have placed far too much faith in the judgement of their elected representatives, especially those within the E.U. legislature. Only time will tell, but if history has anything to say about it, plutocracy it will be.
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