Message from @Stefan Payne
Discord ID: 512679179167203328
Which the government also does
Isnt that anti competition
These laws are also not objective
nothing is but your free market definition is horse shit and makes no sense.
you need rules and enforce them.
LUL
So very cynical
You won't play a Football game without a Referee either.
Thats different because no ones rights can be harmed in a free market
Which rights yes are enforced by government
But you never refuted anything I said
Even actual criminals have a more objective set of laws
You're essentially advocating for "right of the strongest" and that every Company can abuse the power and do everything they can to get money out of the pocket of the people.
Like I said before all monopolies came from government or got dismantled with time
no
if there were no rules, there would have been no Compaq, Dell and co
Yes the rules being force and market separated until someones rights are violated
*are
Yes and now you need a market that's protected by Patents and needs billions of dollars to enter.
So in short: you need the Rules and to enforce it, so that such things do not happen.
Wow, I'm in agreement with Stefan for the third time today and it's not even lunchtime. The end times are most certainly upon us. 🙀
Yeah, one of those Examples would be Microsoft ^^
And Google (Android)
So free market means that everyone plays to the same rules and doesn't abuse or misuse the power given by the market.
Now, after M$ left the Mobile Phone OS Market, Google was forced in the EU to charge money for Android.
M$ always charged for mobile Windows.
Who enforces the rules?
Im back
These arguments dont have any basis to them
It rests on it requires a lot of money to get in without defining why it takes that much
Saying that it happens without government
So google Monopoly happened with Gouvernment? How so?
and Microsoft?
They still have competitors
Same with Microsoft
Where's OS/2 then? Or BeOS?
Also they have both used law suits to their advantage
As for patents it should be based on Great Britain’s Copyright Act of 1911