| ▲ | majorchord 2 hours ago | |||||||
It's not so much forcing people to Chrome/chromium for specific features, but trying to increase market share through more subtle means, like paying to have their search engine featured, advertising their products everywhere possible (including inside other people's apps), slowing down their sites (like youtube) on other browsers, or tying in other services (along with way too much personal info) to try to keep people within their sphere of influence. Is Linux also a monopoly? In a way sure, but I think a big difference is they're not "doing evil" as people claim Google is, and all the development/decisions are still made out in the open in a democratic way. Former Google execs have even compared their setup to "running the New York Stock Exchange while trading on it." At least Linux isn't trying to tell people what to do with their software. | ||||||||
| ▲ | philipallstar an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> it is a monopoly by extending the internet in ways that force users into using their browser engine 2 messages later that seems to be contradicted? > It's not so much forcing people to Chrome/chromium for specific features I might've misread. > but trying to increase market share through more subtle means, like paying to have their search engine featured This isn't Chromium, the open source basis of many web browsers. Now you're talking about Google the company. > Is Linux also a monopoly? Monopolies in the sense worth discussing are highly popular things that are held in place by things other than competition. If anything, Google props up Chrome's competitors to reduce this. | ||||||||
| ▲ | vel0city an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
So now Chrome is a "monopoly" because they're "advertising their products everywhere possible". I guess I can only ever drink Redbull, they're a monopoly, because they're advertising their products everywhere. Seriously? That's our standard of what is a "monpoply"? Words have no meaning anymore. You can choose to use something different. The device you bought probably came with an alternative! Otherwise, the device next to it on the shelf on the store where you bought it likely would have had an alternative browser, because most devices on the store shelves outside of some hypothetical physical Google store don't come with Chrome. | ||||||||
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