On Sep 17, 2018, at 17:51, Nick Hilliard <n...@foobar.org> wrote:
> Patrick W. Gilmore wrote on 17/09/2018 22:40:
>> Expecting any for-profit business (all of them, not just REITs) to do
>> less than extract maximum cash is deluding yourself.
> oh sure, but price gouging is often bad business practice in the long term.  
> Humans evolved a strong sense of injustice and have a long memory for people 
> and organisations whom they feel take advantage of them.
> 
> As someone else pointed out, business practices like this can work in a 
> rising market, but not so well when market conditions become difficult and 
> people end up in a position of being able to make a choice between 
> organisations which may have treated them badly in the past and those which 
> have not.

No argument. You cut out part of my reply:

        When a business gives you something for free, they are expecting
        something in return - return business, personal data, lower
        churn, good reviews, customer loyalty, etc. - that they can turn
        into cash. Any business with little or no competition can be
        expected to raise prices. This is not exactly new or surprising.

If you “s/free/free or lower cost/“, it satisfies your statement as well. Every 
business should be deciding “how much can I make -long term-“, and take into 
account what you, I, and others have said here. Some will think short term, and 
(hopefully) the market will punish them over time.

Anyway, I think everyone on the thread agrees. Xconn fees are higher than they 
should be, but not necessarily higher than the market will bear. Yet.

Besides, once everyone turns up a single 100 Tbps port to PacketFabric (or two 
for redundancy), xconn fees will be irrelevant. :-)

-- 
TTFN,
patrick

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