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You get the choice to not buy it. They made it, they should be able to decide how it’s used.


Yeah, and if they don't like Android either, they still have the choice of not having a phone at all, therefore not having a job, medical care, a house, ... Maybe, you should consider the context of antitrust legislation and what that entails for your argument.

And maybe baby, you should also explore, if you may be affected by a cultural economic dogma founded in times of red scare propaganda. Because these naive free market takes tend to come up a bit reflexively in some people, but are actually very rare for economic scientists.


I'm not a crazy free market maximalist or antitrust hater.. its very important in many markets.

I just don't think its really necessary or high priority for iPhones. Android is one OS like Linux is one OS, there are 5-6 big time manufacturers with their own OSes, 100s of phones at all price points. I was replying to someone complaining about the price point but there are so many great phones at lower price points. Not to mention discounted rates on plans or second hand phones.

This particular case was about Apple not allowing third party payment options. The payment market is cornered by Visa/MasterCard that charges 1% on every single transaction. They charge a huge percent rate on a constant amount of work. There are countries that operate their own payment systems that have 0 or close to 0 fees on transactions. But no one is going to go after Visa/MC in a 2-player market just like phones that hasn't reduced prices in decades? So now Spotify can stop paying fees to one monopolist and pay them to the next one down the line? These don't look like rational, considered decisions by antitrust agencies to focus on the markets that have the worst behaviour, more just piling on the current thing.


> I was replying to someone complaining about the price point

No, you were replying to someone pointing out how much Apple already got paid for their product, the infrastructure and ecosystem entry, before rent seeking from Spotify.

> So now Spotify can stop paying fees to one monopolist and pay them to the next one down the line?

Are you serious? First off, the fees differ substantially, Visa/MC is likely involved in any case, and most importantly: That's not what this lawsuit is about at all. The antitrust dynamic comes with the fact that Apple has it's own competitive service going. Spotify can't even inform its customers about alternative payment options within the app.

Not to mention, mixing the end consumer choices with Spotify's choices now does not make a lot of sense as an argument to begin with.


Oh I do exercise that right but it's not that simple. There's only so much the average citizen can do against the marketing and the network effects that a trillion+ dollar company can buy.

Luckily there's such thing as consumer protection laws in EU.

So my family can enjoy at least some protection from idiotic things such as not using industry standard charging cables (USB-C) while still marketing their product as green. And abusing their power against other companies and customers.

We're still left with jokes like a thousand dollar 8GB/256GB laptop sporting glued parts and an outdated 60hz screen (my friends 6year old phone has better screen refresh rate).

Not to mention they compare M3 performance against M1 instead of M2. There's only so much laws can do against deceiving marketing.


Ah yes, and people also have the choice not to buy cigarettes, too. Let's remove all the warnings on the boxes and cancel any law changes around trying to reduce smoking.




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