Peter T. Breuer wrote: > That's UP TO THE FRIGGING STORE (in contrast to the MS situation).
No, it's not up to the store. In all the cases I mentioned, it's the manufacturer of the product that imposes the restrictions and the manufacturer of the product is not the store owner. >> I don't know why you think >> that's an attempt to subvert market economics, > Because "it is". Then every franchise on the planet and every company that sells wholesale only to "authorized resellers" and has non-compete in their authorization terms, is subverting the market. >> it's actually just a normal >> part of the way the market works. > > No it isn't. Yes, it is. > I think I'll just plonk you. Absurd and outlandish statements like > that put you beyond the pale. The law has spoken on the matter - the > courts have judged, and "that is illegal" and "that is a monopoly" > and "that is an illegal trade practice" are its judgments. I defy you to find any court that has ruled this practice illegal for a company that does not have a monopoly. Because if they did, I'm going after Doctor's Associates and Kenmore. What do you have to agree to in order to get OSX wholesale for resale? What about Solaris? DS -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list