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863 points IdealeZahlen | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.221s | source
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spacebanana7 ◴[] No.43718419[source]
Google isn't a monopoly in the Standard Oil sense of the term. Its ad revenue is big because it occupies so much user attention. I actually think many suggested remedies would actually make Google more profitable.

For example, prohibiting Apple-Style search deals would mean that Google gets a smaller amount of traffic, but that traffic would come with zero cost. That could end up being more profitable. A similar argument applies to Chrome or any other customer acquisition vehicle.

The real barriers to making Google competitive are fixable but require a different sort of regulation outside of antitrust.

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nativeit ◴[] No.43718488[source]
> Google isn’t a monopoly in the Standard Oil sense of the term.

Aren’t they? It doesn’t sound like those two interpretations are mutually exclusive.

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spacebanana7 ◴[] No.43718618[source]
In the sense of the Sherman Act and similar legislation, monopolies exist in the sense of having exclusive control over some supply and raising prices against consumers.

This isn't what Google does, they generally lower prices for consumers and the competition is only a click away.

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1. dragonwriter ◴[] No.43718785[source]
> In the sense of the Sherman Act [...]

> This isn't what Google does [...]

Odd, then, that this is the second case within a year where Google has been found, in fact, to have violated the Sherman Act. This suggests that your description of what the Sherman Act means, or of what Google does (or both) are wrong in significant ways.