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The Monopolies That Dominate the Internet

Tim Wu has a piece up at the Wall Street Journal pointing out that the free-market, open Internet — "competition in its purest form" — has evolved to be dominated by monopolies. Wu argues that this is nothing new, and that each wave of information technology in the US has followed a similar pattern. "Today's Internet borders will probably change eventually, especially as new markets appear. But it's hard to avoid the conclusion that we are living in an age of large information monopolies. Could it be that the free market on the Internet actually tends toward monopolies? Could it even be that demand, of all things, is actually winnowing the online free market — that Americans, so diverse and individualistic, actually love these monopolies? ... Info-monopolies tend to be good-to-great in the short term and bad-to-terrible in the long term."

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  1. Re:'Free market' means muddled thinking by Arker · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Of course a monopoly is not an efficient outcome. Did you even read what I wrote before hitting reply? FFS. The point is that the market doesnt create this outcome. The state does. That is not a market failure, it's a political failure.

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