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xixi77 | 8 years ago

I don't really see why this is necessarily unfair, unless there is literally no other way to reach consumers other than through Amazon: shouldn't their own product pages show up in Google search results, for one, not to mention other online stores?

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xbryanx|8 years ago

It's not really about whether it's unfair. It's about whether it's against Japan's democratically defined laws.

xixi77|8 years ago

Of course; I know very little about Japan's antitrust laws, it's really beside the point whether they are democratically defined or not. It's on Amazon to argue about their interpretation through Japanese courts or by whatever is the mechanism of redress they have in this case, if any.

I was responding to the parent comment calling the arrangement as described in article unfair.

abiox|8 years ago

> unless there is literally no other way

is this a useful standard? this is ostensibly always true - if nothing else, you can grab a sign and walk into any populated area to 'reach consumers'.

xixi77|8 years ago

Well maybe not to that extent, but to my knowledge things are not that bad in Japan yet :) Let's just not confuse market share with monopoly (in economic sense of course, which is what we are talking about here -- the Japanese legal definition may well be different, and it is that one that matters for Amazon.)