• ElleChaise@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    I think we may be entering a new era politically. Thank goodness. Maybe we’ll see some momentum in antitrust again, it’s been 120 years since we last got the ball rolling, and what we got was well worth fighting for in my opinion. The world can always be a little bit better, and antitrust laws help us make it better.

    • DeathsEmbrace@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Monopolies are still a big problem. Amazon uses a hostage situation to take a % of everyone. You want to know the best part about corporate capitalism? They will always adapt because they can just make us pay for everything they lose. Any competition to amazon needs an entire database, website and security. How many starters can swim? You need a huge investment to hope you dont sink in the first 2 quarters. I can go on and on but until they make these companies pay for their competition its disencouraging to even try.

      • makeasnek@lemmy.ml
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        9 months ago

        Glad to see this action being taken, Amazon has certainly abused their market position. I would also add that Amazon does have competition in the form of eBay, and Amazon is rarely the cheaper option. And there’s a hodgepodge of other online marketplaces which look a lot like eBay but are usually focused on one niche or another. They usually get bought up by one of the big firms if they get big enough.

        If there were a viable alternative to eBay, sellers would join en masse and buyers would follow the cheap supply. Buyer fraud is rampant on eBay, every seller has to raise their prices to compensate for it. I have been selling for years but I never sell items > $50 because buyer fraud is so common. Buyer will claim the item didn’t work/didn’t arrive and even with all the evidence in your corner and spending an hour or two on appeals, there’s a very good chance the buyer gets the item without paying for it even if you do everything “by the book”.

        Crypto integration could help make this a reality, hell, make the whole platform decentralized. I would gladly mail a $200 iPhone to somebody in Nigeria if I knew they couldn’t reverse the transaction where they paid me for it like they can with PayPal. Reputation systems and/or escrow options could help protect the buyer and seller, and you could choose if you wanted escrow for each transaction. But unlike eBay, you could choose from hundreds of escrow providers which would insure balanced judgements come out of them. eBay has been undergoing enshittification for like a decade now.

        Peer-to-peer markets for everything (like eBay) help encourage and enable re-use and repair, which is great for the environment and low income people. I wish somebody would come disrupt that market and make eBay alternatives.