Comment by llmslave2
1 day ago
Those brands are not immune at all. Everybody I know (who isn't in tech) has a negative opinion of these brands.
1 day ago
Those brands are not immune at all. Everybody I know (who isn't in tech) has a negative opinion of these brands.
> Everybody I know... has a negative opinion of these brands.
Not uncommon but they still use them, that's how monopolies work. I mean, people do hate monopolies but that changes absolutely nothing.
The network effect is real and cannot be broken without a concerted media push, which is another can of worms I'd rather not open this year.
Something can be both flawed and hated, yet still useful, and still good enough.
There is also a cost to switching products, and that has nothing to do with monopolies. Unfortunately the M word is thrown around to describe basically any company with a significant market share and it totally dilutes the meaning of the term.
This is fascinating - your complaint appears to be that someone used the term "near-monopoly" and you claim that its being used to describe companies with a "significant market share" - which is the actual definition of the term.
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