^^^

      • megopie@beehaw.org
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        14 hours ago

        but, steam does not fit the definition of a monopoly under US law, as that would require them to have “restricted commerce or trade” to achieve their dominant market position.

    • Kissaki@beehaw.org
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      22 hours ago

      poly means many

      so if both mono and poly are in monopoly, why do you only pick mono, or why does only mono matter here?

      • sp3ctr4l
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        18 hours ago

        The word for a market dominated by only a few very large players is oligopoly, not… polyopoly.

        Not saying you’re saying that, just saying.

        As to the etymology…

        Its derives from Greek.

        A monopoly has one (mono) influential seller for many (poly) consumers.

        An oligopoly has a few, wealthy (oligo, as in oligarch, oligarchy) sellers for many (poly) consumers.

        Importantly, in Greek, poly is closely related to polis, meaning basically ‘all of the people/citizens’.

        This is also where English gets ‘Politics’ from.

        Also, I wrote a whole other comment, but the mere existence of any competitors, no matter how small… doesn’t mean you aren’t a monopoly.

        Its just means you aren’t a perfect monopoly, which basically never exists in real life, outside of public utilities.

        If the rubric for ‘is it a monopoly?’ was ‘do any competitors exist?’, then basically no company that’s ever been broken up or regulated for being a monopoly was actually a monopoly.

      • TachyonTele@lemm.ee
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        20 hours ago

        Because that’s the way i decided to dumb it down. Apparently it wasn’t dumbed down enough.