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Keyword: monopoly

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  • Break media's election grip

    10/14/2007 9:21:57 AM PDT · by AuntB · 36 replies · 98+ views
    Beaver County Times ^ | Oct. 14, 2007 | Rod Belsky
    Duncan Hunter, Chris Dodd, Tom Tancredo, Bill Richardson, Ron Paul. Are you familiar with these names and their respective platforms? If the answer is no, I am not surprised. These are five of the 17 major party candidates running for president. Unless you are paying close attention, watching the presidential debates or taking a serious interest in the presidential election, you probably never heard of these gentlemen. Why? Because the major media rarely, if ever, cover these candidates. Only the media's chosen few, the big six or seven, are thoroughly and consistently covered. As time moves forward, this short list...
  • Is Apple the New Microsoft?

    09/07/2007 9:54:37 PM PDT · by paudio · 52 replies · 1,163+ views
    pcworld.com ^ | 9/7/07 | Mike Elgan
    Ten years ago, Microsoft was the company everyone loved to hate. The most vociferous Microsoft haters slammed the company for being a greedy industry bully that used its monopolistic, clunky, copycat operating system to force software on users and coerce partners into unfair licensing deals. Don't look now, but the role of the industry's biggest bully is increasingly played by Apple, not Microsoft. Here's a look at how Apple has shoved Microsoft aside as the company with the worst reputation as a monopolist, copycat and a bully. -snip- Apple fully understands the power of monopoly pricing. The company has sold...
  • Occupational Licensing: Ranking the States and Exploring Alternatives (Reason.com)

    08/27/2007 5:38:53 PM PDT · by traviskicks · 21 replies · 619+ views
    Reason.com ^ | 8/24/07
    News Release California, Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire Restrict the Most Jobs Hair braider, fortune teller, florist and interior designer are some of the jobs for which states require licenses Los Angeles (August 24, 2007) – Do you want to be a fortune teller in Maryland? Your future better include a license from the state. How about being a hair braider in Mississippi? You'll need 300 to 1,500 hours of training and government permission. Want to sell flowers in Louisiana? Only licensed florists can do that. And almost every state requires certification if you want to move furniture and hang art...
  • Bored games (Dave Barry)

    08/19/2007 7:57:51 AM PDT · by nuconvert · 18 replies · 664+ views
    Miami Herald ^ | Dave Barry
    Bored games BY DAVE BARRY (This classic Dave Barry column was originally published Jan. 26, 1997.) OK, here's a nostalgia question: What childhood game does this remind you of? ''Colonel Mustard in the library with a candlestick.'' If you answered, ''Spin the Bottle,'' then I frankly do not want to know any more about your childhood. What I'm referring to is, of course, the classic board game ''Clue,'' in which you try to solve a murder by using a logical process of deduction to narrow down the various possibilities until your sister has to go to the bathroom, at which...
  • The Secrets of the World's Richest Man [guess which country?]

    08/04/2007 5:47:20 PM PDT · by COBOL2Java · 47 replies · 2,516+ views
    Wall Street Journal (Weekend Journal) ^ | 4 August 2007 | DAVID LUHNOW
    Carlos Slim is Mexico's Mr. Monopoly. It's hard to spend a day in Mexico and not put money in his pocket. The 67-year-old tycoon controls more than 200 companies -- he says he's "lost count" -- in telecommunications, cigarettes, construction, mining, bicycles, soft-drinks, airlines, hotels, railways, banking and printing. In all, his companies account for more than a third of the total value of Mexico's leading stock market index, while his fortune represents 7% of the country's annual economic output. (At his height, John D. Rockefeller's wealth was equal to 2.5% of U.S. gross domestic product.) As one Mexico...
  • Will Microsoft roll out a PC soon? ~ Commentary: Xbox may just be part of a bigger strategy

    07/30/2007 10:15:40 AM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 10 replies · 292+ views
    Marketwatch ^ | Jul 20, 2007 | John C. Dvorak
    BERKELEY, Calif. (MarketWatch) -- Will Microsoft Corp. design, produce and ship a branded computer in the United States? It's already doing this in India without fanfare. Nobody has considered the possibility that the Microsoft PC in India is a market test for a bigger rollout. As of this writing the company isn't saying. Reports out of India are sketchy. Over the years, Microsoft has been accused of copying what Apple Inc. does, as far as user interface is concerned. Why not copy the idea of an entire branded computer, too? After all, with the Zune player, Microsoft has played follow-the-leader...
  • Competition or Monopoly

    06/12/2007 10:41:32 PM PDT · by gpapa · 2 replies · 469+ views
    Townhall.com ^ | June 13, 2007 | Walter Williams
    Are consumers better off with a competitive or monopolistic provision of goods and services? Let's apply that question to a few areas of our lives. Prior to deregulation, when there was a monopoly and restricted entry in the provision of telephone services, were consumers better off or worse off than they are with today's ruthless competition to get our business? Anyone over 40 will recognize the differences. Competition has provided consumers with a vast array of choices, lower and lower prices and more courteous customer care than when government had its heavy hand on the provision of telephone services.
  • Microsoft Urges Antitrust Officials To Scuttle DoubleClick Deal

    04/16/2007 6:13:06 AM PDT · by steve-b · 10 replies · 584+ views
    The New York Times ^ | 4/15/07 | Steve Lohr
    Microsoft, a veteran defendant of epic antitrust battles in the United States and Europe, is urging antitrust officials to consider scuttling Google’s plan to buy DoubleClick, an online advertising company. Microsoft contends that the $3.1 billion deal, announced last Friday, would hurt competition in the fast-growing market for advertising on the Web and raise questions about how much personal information would be collected by Google, which is already a dominant player in online advertising....
  • Wal-Mart banking bullies

    03/19/2007 4:57:46 PM PDT · by rdb3 · 10 replies · 525+ views
    Los Angeles Times ^ | 19 MARCH 2007 | EDITORIAL
    EDITORIAL Wal-Mart banking bullies The retail giant has been foiled yet again by its enemies, this time in trying to open a bank. March 19, 2007 THE ANTI-WAL-MART lynch mob has prevailed again, forcing the retailer to forgo plans to establish a bank. The mob has become a powerful force, bringing together the company's usual big-labor antagonists, mom-and-pop Main Street merchants and the formidable American Bankers Assn. Recognizing that the company's bid to create a so-called industrial loan company faced a hostile regulatory environment, Wal-Mart on Friday withdrew its 2-year-old application before the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. That's a shame....
  • Nichols fights private roads

    03/17/2007 6:48:30 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 15 replies · 448+ views
    Jacksonville Daily Progress ^ | March 16, 2007 | Jim Goodson
    AUSTIN – A groundswell seems to be developing in Texas against the privatization of toll roads. And State Senator Robert Nichols is a key leader of the fight. Nichols has filed SB 1267, which would place a two-year moratorium on the privatization of toll roads. Companion SB 1268 prohibits converting existing roads to toll roads – a fight many voters thought they’d already won. Under current law an existing road can still be converted to a toll road even though many have regional or statewide use. “These roads were built with public money for public use,” Nichols said March 6...
  • Why Vista's DRM Is Bad For You

    02/14/2007 6:27:10 PM PST · by Swordmaker · 14 replies · 871+ views
    Forbes Magazine ^ | 02/12/2007 | Bruce Scheiner
    Windows Vista includes an array of "features" that you don't want. These features will make your computer less reliable and less secure. They'll make your computer less stable and run slower. They will cause technical support problems. They may even require you to upgrade some of your peripheral hardware and existing software. And these features won't do anything useful. In fact, they're working against you. They're digital rights management (DRM) features built into Vista at the behest of the entertainment industry. And you don't get to refuse them. The details are pretty geeky, but basically Microsoft has reworked a lot...
  • Want an iPhone? Beware the iHandcuffs

    01/14/2007 11:07:43 AM PST · by quidnunc · 487 replies · 6,154+ views
    The New York Times ^ | January 14, 2007 | Randall Stross
    Steve Jobs, Apple’s showman nonpareil, provided the first public glimpse of the iPhone last week — gorgeous, feature-laden and pricey. While following the master magician’s gestures, it was easy to overlook a most disappointing aspect: like its slimmer iPod siblings, the iPhone’s music-playing function will be limited by factory-installed “crippleware.” If “crippleware” seems an unduly harsh description, it balances the euphemistic names that the industry uses for copy protection. Apple officially calls its own standard “FairPlay,” but fair it is not. The term “crippleware” comes from the plaintiff in a class-action lawsuit, Melanie Tucker v. Apple Computer Inc., that is...
  • Scholar: Russia Has Energy Stranglehold Over Europe

    12/26/2006 4:05:06 AM PST · by baseball_fan · 6 replies · 536+ views
    Voice of America ^ | Dec 7, 2006 | Barry Wood
    Marshall Goldman, a long-time student of Russia, says energy wealth and control over export pipelines have made Russia more powerful than at any time in its history. VOA's Barry Wood reports the Harvard University professor spoke at a forum Thursday in Washington. Professor Goldman told the Jamestown Foundation that Russia's post-cold war power is built on its oil and gas resources. He said both eastern and western Europe have become dependent on Russia for oil and gas and that alternative supplies are not available. The recent boom in oil and gas prices, said Professor Goldman, has greatly boosted Russia's economic...
  • The A380 superjumbo: The white elephant

    11/22/2006 3:21:05 PM PST · by Paul Ross · 22 replies · 809+ views
    The Independent ^ | November 22, 2006 | Michael Harrison
    <p>No material from Independent Online is permitted on Free Republic.</p>
  • Who will control alcohol production?

    11/20/2006 1:55:35 AM PST · by eastern · 9 replies · 578+ views
    Russia-IC ^ | November 15, 2006 | Olga Pletneva
    Alcohol manufacturers being afraid of the government to introduce public monopoly suggested creation of a single unified agency – the Alcohol Safety Council of Russia. Although entrepreneurs may be late: the State Duma is working out the bill regulating not only monopoly in the industrial sector but in retail field, either. The problem of alcohol market (of both foreign and home production) has been discussed for a long time. Actually, there doesn’t exist a unified agency able to turn the market into a centrally controlled one. The market is observed by several ministries and departments: the Ministry of Finance, Russian...
  • Petition to SAVE the FABRIC department at Wal-Mart

    11/13/2006 4:57:50 AM PST · by GailA · 44 replies · 6,893+ views
    Petition Online ^ | 11/13/06 | GailA
    Help save our fabric source!click here for petitionI make lap quilts for the VA Hospital spinal cord unit. in Memphis and Wal-Mart is the only source of fabric in Millington, TN...as a widow my income is very limited I can't afford to drive 20-30 minutes to the next 2 sources and pay $2.00 more per yard for fabric. Quilting is my only hobby. I've made 10 lap quilts so far this year for the VA Hospital spinal cord unit.For many rural women Wal-Mart is the ONLY source available for fabric. Better yet call 800 Wal Mart and talk to a...
  • Breaking the Chain

    11/06/2006 12:35:02 PM PST · by A. Pole · 108 replies · 1,577+ views
    Harper's Magazine ^ | July 2006 | Barry C. Lynn
    There is an undeniable beauty to laissez-faire theory, with its promise that by struggling against one another, by grasping and elbowing and shouting and shoving, we create efficiency and satisfaction and progress for all. This concept has shaped, at the most fundamental levels, how we understand and engineer our basic freedoms -economic, political, and moral. Until recently, however, most politicians and economists accepted that freedom within the marketplace had to be limited, at least to some degree, by rules designed to ensure general economic and social outcomes. From Adam Smith onward, almost all the great preachers of laissez-faire were tempered...
  • South Korean executive accused of bribing AAFES (Man paid $100,000 to U.S. military official)

    11/04/2006 4:24:31 PM PST · by Jet Jaguar · 3 replies · 483+ views
    Stars and Stripes ^ | November 5, 2006 | Hwang Hae-rym and Teri Weaver,
    SEOUL — A South Korean telecommunications executive accused of bribing U.S. military officials in exchange for a multimillion-dollar Internet service contract is awaiting documents from the Army and Air Force Exchange Service to help build his defense, his lawyers said. As Jeong Gi-hwnan, 40, stood in a green prison uniform in a South Korean court Friday, his lawyers sought more time to defend him against an accusation that he gave AAFES officials cash and entertainment in exchange for a multiyear Internet service contract for U.S. servicemembers in South Korea, according to court proceedings and Korean National Police. As an SSRT...
  • America Vs. Third Parties Dick Meyer Is Tired Of The Two-Party Political System

    11/01/2006 6:21:31 AM PST · by ruffedgrouse · 88 replies · 1,044+ views
    CBS News ^ | April 13, 2006 | Dick Meyer
    No young person who has ever followed politics with the ferocity of a sports fan, no citizen who has been an idealist for at least a few hours, hasn't daydreamed about a third party or independent candidate – a third party winner, actually. At some point everyone with a civic soul, no matter what their ideological flavor, has yearned for an independent spirit to break through the homogenized, cuisinarted horse manure that is modern American politics. Yet we are stuck with the same two parties, ad nauseam. It's like a world where there are two baseball teams, the Yankees and...
  • Welcome Wal-Mart

    10/30/2006 10:53:47 PM PST · by 2ndDivisionVet · 9 replies · 619+ views
    Capitalism Magazine ^ | February 10, 2006 | Jonathan Hoenig
    Listen to many elected officials or union bosses, and you’d think Wal-Mart was a malicious criminal, exploiting workers and pillaging towns for the benefit of greedy shareholders. But if that’s the case, how has Wal-Mart grown from a single shop in a small Arkansas town into a world-wide colossus with 4,000 stores, 1.3 million employees, $245 billion in annual sales and 100 million customers each week? The company’s success isn’t built on exploiting. It’s built on providing. Wal-Mart can’t force anybody to work at its stores, nor can it force anybody to shop there. Through relentless cost-cutting and technological innovation,...