Online AntiTrust Issues
Antitrust law is a United States legal code that helps to maintain market competition by regulating anti-competition actions by organizations. The Sherman Act of 1890 was one of the first attempts to restrict large companies who fixed price, output and then manipulated demand to maximize their products. Standard Oil was one of the prime early examples of a company that controlled markets to the point that the government felt was detrimental to the entry of other competitors (Bork, 1993). In our current example, companies like Facebook and Google are being investigated, similar to Microsoft and AT&T, for controlling the Internet search process and/or network effects. This does not stop with Facebook and Google, but moves into many of the giant e-tailers (Amazon, EBay, etc.) that often use predatory or collusive practices to force customers into either advertising on their site, pricing to their scale, or in the case of Amazon, using predatory pricing on its e-books in order to capture market share. Now, combine all this with the vast amount of personal data (demographics and psychographics) these companies collect, all for free, based on browsing, purchasing, and repeat behaviors from consumers, and it is easy to see why many of these entities are under investigation for antitrust behavior (Fox, 2013).
Part 3- We live in a capitalistic society, based on Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations and the idea that the individual...
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