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Bureaucratic chief to minion: "Go out and find something to regulate."
My youngest daughter wanted an iPhone. After some research -- I showed her the Android, and presented it as an open-source option. She researched the upcoming G2 upgrade, and agreed it looked better. We'll get our phones this week. I don't know if it's better, or it's just better marketing -- but I've looked at them both, and I like Android. And then there's the issue of contracts ...
I love this game! I feel no pain when I'm charged for my phone bill. These devices bring great joy to my entire family (even though my youngest daughter is the only one who really uses all of the features).
I sincerely hope our government doesn't choose to save me from these "predators".
My God, You have Hollywood Hazlett, Larry White, Walter Williams, Cowen, yourself at GMU. What an all-star team!
Innovation-killing seems to be all the rage.
Next, let's investigate how bakeries can make so readily available so many types of fresh bread to willing buyers. There has to be something devious at work.
In the words of John Stossel, gimme a break.
This is following the same dumb pattern as the Microsoft antitrust bandwagon. I hate Windows, and simply used other platforms - Mac and Linux. There is a choice out there, and at some time in the near future the iPhone will not be exclusive to AT&T.
My bigger concern is that taxes on my cell service are 9% of my bill and seem to continuously climb while my service costs are stable to decreasing, and feature set is increasing.
Regulate, regulate, regulate!!!
This article still fails the address how fundamentally immoral patents are.
We would certainly see less rent seeking behavior (and more competition) by Apple and AT&T if not for the government created monopolies.
(In reality, it's the complete opposite. Most intraurban mass transit systems in the US were built by private corporations, whereas 99% of the roads were built by the government.)
Too bad "open spectrum" is largely derided by libertarians as socialist. Leaving aside the fact that only a government can actually enforce the property rights of spectrum owners (sort of like IP, which your colleague Russ Roberts has so much faith in that he's willing to call anti-IP folks Obama-worshipping socialists on EconTalk.)
I don't mean to put words in his mouth- if this isn't the case someone feel free to correct me.
http://www.econtalk.org/archives/2009/06/helpri...
...he seemed very sympathetic to the author's ideas, didn't really press him on his very pro-IP stance on copyright, and I'm pretty sure at one point likened those who believe in the abolition of copyright to those who support Barack Obama (which I presume is the Russ Roberts equivalent of Sean Hannity yelling "socialist!" at one of his guests). I'd very much like to be proven wrong, though...
As one who began his career in radio in 1959, only not the radio you know and love, but radio none-the-less, do you even have a tiny bit of comprehension of what any particular radio frequency would be like without some sort of coordinated effort to limit the radio stations broadcasting on that frequency would sound like? Can you say chaos? Say it again, chaos.
What does chaos bring to radio in the way of efficiency or enjoyment?
I know of one nation that solved the problem of overriding competition by simply making transmitters so powerful that they had no problem with worldwide communications on any particular frequency. Of course, everyone else simply waited until they were through before going on about their business.
Is that what you're looking for, Stephen?
As an Electrical Engineer, I've taken signals processing, and AM and FM are only on the edge of what's possible with radio transmission. Ever more ranges and types of frequencies make it impossible for one company to broadcast over every form of signal. Radio has come a long way since 1959, and it would be moving a lot faster without government regulation.
We have real world examples of this. Somalia, a nation with no government, has the most developed cell phone network in Africa. Why? It's not in the interest of business there to interfere with each other, and to purposely do so would cost more resources than ever would be economically viable.