Paul Rubin wrote:

> "David Schwartz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

>>     If you want to sell meals with Whoppers in them, you have to get
>> permission to do so from Burger King corporate. And they will not
>> let you also sell Big Macs in the same store, even if McDonald's had
>> no objection.

> Why do you keep comparing Microsoft with Burger King?  They are not
> the same.  Burger King is operating in a competitive environment.
> Microsoft is a convicted illegal monopolist.  Monopolists are not
> allowed to do the same things that competitors are allowed to do.
> So, your observations about Burger King are irrelevant to Microsoft.

    Because the error I'm correcting is the belief that Microsoft's conduct 
was extremely unusual (unlike anything any reputable company had ever done, 
essentially). I understand that people think it was wrong because it was 
specifically Microsoft that did it and the specific circumstances they were 
in with respect to their market. I've addressed that in other parts of this 
thread.

    DS


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