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'The End Of The Level Playing Field' (avc.com) 108

Venture Capitalist Fred Wilson writes in a blog post: When the Internet came along in the early 90s, we saw something completely different. Here was a level playing field where anyone could launch a business without permission from anyone. We had a great run over the last 25 years but I fear it's coming to an end, brought on by the growing consolidation of market power in the big consumer facing tech companies like Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon, etc, by the constricted distribution mechanisms on mobile devices, and by new leadership at the FCC that is going to tear down the notion that mobile carriers can't play the same game cable companies played. It is certainly true that consumers, particularly low-income consumers, like getting free or subsidized data plans. There is no doubt about that. But when the subsidies are coming from the big tech companies, who can easily pay them, to buy competitive advantage over that nimble startup that is scaring them, well we know how that movie ends.
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'The End Of The Level Playing Field'

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  • Subsidies (Score:5, Funny)

    by DontBeAMoran ( 4843879 ) on Monday February 06, 2017 @10:43AM (#53811521)

    But when the subsidies are coming from the big tech companies, who can easily pay them, to buy competitive advantage over that nimble startup that is scaring them, well we know how that movie ends.

    No we don't know because that movie isn't on Netflix yet, you insensitive clod!

    • Or it is on Netflix but you live in one of those many places where Netflix offers a small fraction of the catalog (but for the same global price).
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 06, 2017 @10:44AM (#53811527)

    You can make money up to a certain point, but if the big companies notice you and can't buy you out, they will destroy you with legal proceedings. The broken patent laws are enough to put anyone out of business, pretty much everyone is breaking some unknown law.

  • Local problem? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 06, 2017 @10:46AM (#53811539)

    and by new leadership at the FCC that is going to tear down the notion that mobile carriers can't play the same game cable companies played

    Isn't that mostly a local problem in the single country where the FCC has authority?

    • Re:Local problem? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Zontar The Mindless ( 9002 ) <plasticfish.info@ g m a il.com> on Monday February 06, 2017 @10:55AM (#53811619) Homepage

      Most of the issues cited are specific to the US. Most of the "innovation" coming from the US these days consists of adding more bells & whistles and/or gaming the system. But there are lots of places that aren't in the US.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      subsidized data plans.

      Does anyone really think these exist anymore?

      These companies haven't ungraded their infrastructure in years. They are probably all fully depreciated and every penny they bring in above and beyond the maintenance costs is pure profit. They don't invest in network upgrades, as evident that most neighborhood still language as early DSL speeds, or in the case of cable, their over crowded loops.

      I have a 100mbit connection with "Spectrum", but fully 1/4 of the time I'm look at 0 to 50kb do

    • Re:Local problem? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by interkin3tic ( 1469267 ) on Monday February 06, 2017 @11:36AM (#53811903)
      The rest of the world seems to have benefitted from some of the upstarts that came from silicon valley and elsewhere in the US that arguably existed only because of the more level playing field. That can likely work in a bad way too now. Giant media conglomerates, facebook, google face no real threats in their home which is the biggest market in the world, I have to believe they'll reach their tentacles everywhere else and entrench themselves there too.

      So no, I think allowing an infection in the US could cause a worldwide problem.
    • Not for long (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Comboman ( 895500 ) on Monday February 06, 2017 @11:36AM (#53811907)

      Isn't that mostly a local problem in the single country where the FCC has authority?

      Not for long. The US is very adept at exporting its horrible laws to other countries by writing them into trade agreements.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      A local problem in the US often is a global problem by extension.

      The US represents about 20% of the global economy. Although that figure is declining, it's still a big chunk. And being able to us American consumers as a cash cow underwrites the economic power of these companies in other places.

      By analogy look at the kind of market power Microsoft had in the 90s and 00s. It could always survive failure in any market it entered, sometimes for years on end, because of its Office and Windows cash cows.

  • So many people will end up with a modern version of AOL where I think they belong. As long as techies can still get the real deal, not everything is lost.
    • I imagine that without economies of scale, ISPs offering "a modern version of AOL" are likely to either cease offering "the real deal" or charge hundreds of dollars per month for "the real deal", making it cost-prohibitive to become a freelance techie.

  • by Idisagree ( 4302481 ) on Monday February 06, 2017 @10:50AM (#53811587)

    its almost like you could describe it as a cycle of sorts, funny that....

    see here for more info - www.inc.com/encyclopedia/industry-life-cycle.html

    • Exactly this. The Internet is becoming more standard and everyday than it ever was before, meaning that those who got in early and managed to capitalise are the winners. Look at the car industry for a comparison. There's only Tesla that's a new company that's formed in recent times. This is about to happen to the Internets as well, and it's not even rumours.
      • by Archtech ( 159117 ) on Monday February 06, 2017 @11:20AM (#53811789)

        As soon as you start thinking in terms of "winners" and "losers", you are passively accepting the picture of the Internet as a commercial marketplace in which corporations compete for profit. There are already far too many aspects of modern life of which this is true.

        Regardless of its commercial excrescences (which we are free to ignore if we wish) the Internet continues to be of huge value as a common medium of communication. It's all too easy to overlook the enormous amount of learning and discussion that goes on every day, without anyone paying much notice becuase there is little or no money involved.

        Rather like FOSS, in fact, the true extent of whose adoption is very hard to establish because there is little or no money involved. (How big is the "market" for Linux distributions? N times zero equals zero for all values of N).

        • As soon as you start thinking in terms of "winners" and "losers", you are passively accepting the picture of the Internet as a commercial marketplace in which corporations compete for profit. There are already far too many aspects of modern life of which this is true.

          I'm not sure that's "passively accepting", so much as it is acknowledging the existing state of affairs as it is perceived by the majority of people who aren't Slashdotters.

          Regardless of its commercial excrescences (which we are free to ignore if we wish) the Internet continues to be of huge value as a common medium of communication. It's all too easy to overlook the enormous amount of learning and discussion that goes on every day, without anyone paying much notice becuase there is little or no money involved.

          Unfortunately, there is a lot of money involved in building and maintaining the infrastructure, so all of that grass-roots activity you're rightly extolling exists at the sufferance of corporations that can and will pull the plug in accordance with their own desires and profit-driven agendas.

          Rather like FOSS, in fact, the true extent of whose adoption is very hard to establish because there is little or no money involved. (How big is the "market" for Linux distributions? N times zero equals zero for all values of N).

          Also rather like FOSS, in fact, the true exten

      • by bazorg ( 911295 ) on Monday February 06, 2017 @11:34AM (#53811889)

        We can always take lessons from the past and compare auto industries with whatever we like (in good /. tradition!).
        Nevertheless there are significant differences... and that's just taking the examples from the summary.

        Facebook is not an early internet company... they've turned up after others looked mature enough to get some cash from their products/services... but failed.
        Amazon is an early internet company (IMHO) but which industry cycle pattern applies if they went on a huge horizontal expansion and then vertical integration that leads them to where they are today?
        Google I don't understand and never will...
        Microsoft does not get a mention even though they've been an early internet-related company before 3 out of 4 in the list, and now gets a higher sales total now than when their OS was in 90%+ of devices. They've become a smaller fish in a much larger pond.
        The company formerly known as Apple Computer made their greatest product line by beating established companies in a mature market.

        What cycles do we see there if these companies are all actors in multiple markets precisely to avoid being overtaken by newcomers? The patterns are not *that* obvious and predictable as the grandparent poster suggests. If some new company invents something really great that gets them millions of paying customers, net neutrality rules changing will be a pain but won't stop them completely. More likely the hurry to be acquired will be a bigger factor.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          NONE of those are early internet companies. Microsoft was quite late to the party, and famously said that the internet was not here to stay. Shit, their OS couldn't even run a network stack in the days the early companies were online.

          Real early internet companies include DEC and HP. There were no Windows machines on the internet then.

        • > They've become a smaller fish in a much larger pond.

          More like a slightly-larger fish in an exponentially-larger ocean. On its least-profitable month during the Great Recession, Microsoft made more money than they did the entire year after Windows 95 came out. Most investors would be *delighted* to experience Microsoft-style failure.

          Most of Microsoft's wounds have been either self-inflicted, or more like allergic reactions to imaginary problems -- dumping Windows Mobile *right* at the point when its cap

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's not even true. There is more opportunity for the little guy now than there ever was. More people have computers, especially smart phone and especially in developing nations. We have things like Kickstarter, which despite all the scams has helped a lot of niche products get off the ground. Well, actually turns out many of them are not niche, like board games which have raised millions in the last year alone.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Agreed. None of the fat ass corps are going to sell to niche markets products people want because returns are too low. We're not totally screwed yet because small businesses can scoop these up like hot cakes and probably do pretty well. No one is going to become rich doing this, but you can make a comfortable living this way if done right.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    It's also harder to start a car company today than 100 years ago...

    • by tepples ( 727027 )

      It's also harder to start a car company today than 100 years ago...

      How much of that is directly caused by regulations introduced since then, such as CAFE?

  • The Gold Rush (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    The Internet was in the era of the gold rush, where independent sorts rushed out into the wild to try to make their fortunes. Several did, many didn't. Now we're in the era of the company towns and robber barons. The ending of that era came in part when government set rules with teeth, and in part by the rise of unions.

  • This isn't a new item. In the 1990s, you could have a conversation with a VC, they were willing to fund a venture into completely uncharted waters, even it meant a miserable failure later.

    These days, a VC won't plunk money on the line unless you have a way for them to immediately exit with them being richer. You have to run your startup yourself, then what will happen is that some company will make you a "deal you can't refuse" and your startup will be bought out. You also have to either be into analytic

  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Monday February 06, 2017 @11:12AM (#53811727)
    >> Random Venture Capitalist says "there's nothing new to invent"

    Says a guy about to hang it up, right?
  • reap what you sow (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mschaffer ( 97223 ) on Monday February 06, 2017 @11:13AM (#53811737)

    Seriously, a venture capatalist is complaining about the state of things? VCs created this very environment so that they could profit from it. It was only possible by tying up all of the IP and suing everyone into oblivion if they infringed over the smallest detail.
    You reap what you sow.

    • VCs aren't necessarily into "tying up all of the IP and suing everyone into oblivion." There are many VCs who are hurt by this behavior; and just as important, VCs who are hesitant to get into this space because of such BS.

      Stop making things up.

      The pseudo-syllogism that

      capitalism is bad
      VCs are capitalists only in it for the quick profit (never mind examples such as Amazon)
      Some legals types create a VC firm which type up IP
      Therefore VCs created this environment.

      Is retarded.
  • by RogueWarrior65 ( 678876 ) on Monday February 06, 2017 @11:15AM (#53811759)

    He who has the gold makes the rules. You should be far more concerned about cash-rich companies that can afford to hire lobbyists who will effectively tilt the playing field in their direction through regulations that only they can afford to deal with. Deregulation is the playing field leveler.

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Monday February 06, 2017 @11:27AM (#53811839) Journal
    The article talks only about start-ups vs established players, comparing it to the cable TV operations in 1980s to the current situation in internet companies.

    But there is a more insidious, a more disconcerting tilting of the playing field is happening. Before big-data and this level of data consolidation, commerce/trade happened between large mass of anonymous consumers and service/goods providers. The price information was public, and a few diligent consumers who compare prices, the informed consumers were mixed up with general public. Now the companies are able to cherry pick diligent informed consumers and give them special coupons, special deals and then raise the rack rate, the posted prices. So much of the consumer behavior is being captured, analyzed and the power of the general consumer is getting increasingly diluted.

    So the established big companies are not only able to keep competition away by giving away most common services people want, they are also able to find the consumers who are likely to look for alternatives and keep them in the fold too.

    This kind of power is not similar to cable tv operator vs giants in 1980s. It is more like 19th century London traders who had information about rainfall and estimated harvests from all over the world, and were dealing with uninformed local farmers in various parts of the world. Especially cotton and sugarcane. Say a bumper crop of cotton in South India might be happening while Egypt and south USA were hit by drought. But the Indian farmers might be selling to the agents of London traders at pennies instead of pounds. Today the companies can price products knowing exactly how much they can push you individually not as part of a large collective mass. The implications should frighten people.

  • it's not that new. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 06, 2017 @11:32AM (#53811873)

    When the Internet came along in the early 90s

    Don't mistake when you personally became aware of it with the beginning. I was on the net in 1983, and it wasn't new then. I know a person who was on arpanet in 1979, and it actually started circa 1969 or 1970.

    But yes, it is becoming more centralized, centrally controlled, and proprietary all the time. That's being driven by the choices of several billion non-technical users who don't grasp how critically important it is to maintain openness and decentralization. I do not believe Facebook would have succeeded with the tech-literate users of the 1980's internet. It took the eternal september crowd to make that happen.

    • The older crowd was the one that gave us unsecure protocols like SMTP and DNS. I think that what changed it not only the average technical level of the crowd, but the fact that once the internet grew from a few thousands to a billion, the sense of a small community was lost and replaced by a sense of alienation in a huge crowd where everyone is only for himself.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      When the Internet came along in the early 90s

      Don't mistake when you personally became aware of it with the beginning. I was on the net in 1983, and it wasn't new then.

      Sure, the internet technically existed before the 90s but the 90s is when it took off. The 90s is when HTML took off. The 90s is when shopping on the internet took off. The 90s is when everyone starting using email. The 90s is when the internet left the laboratory and started being used by businesses and consumers alike.

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      But yes, it is becoming more centralized, centrally controlled, and proprietary all the time. That's being driven by the choices of several billion non-technical users who don't grasp how critically important it is to maintain openness and decentralization. I do not believe Facebook would have succeeded with the tech-literate users of the 1980's internet. It took the eternal september crowd to make that happen.

      While they may not value openness and decentralization as much as you do, I think non-technical users value choice. Don't like Netflix? Sign up for Hulu. Don't like Spotify? Sign up for Tidal. Don't like YouTube? Put it on Vimeo. It's more choice with less effort than they're used to, even if they're all proprietary. It's what people are used to, they go to car shop and there's Audi and Ford and Mercedes. Building one from parts and blueprints or DIY kits are for a select few, it's not a skill they have nor

  • Some applications get our admiration because they give us our previous interests and predisposition. These reinforcements of ourselves corral us into similar minded groups, who then get similar non-conflicting information. We become tribalized. That can further understanding in the tribe of astronomy. In internet social arenas, we can become like Belfast, Ireland, where protestants go to protestant schools, catholics go to catholic schools, and the two tribes learn to hate each other. Tribalizing science
  • by Ryanrule ( 1657199 ) on Monday February 06, 2017 @12:22PM (#53812251)
    Tech companies have never played fair. They break laws until they are big enough, then close those loopholes behind them.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Like around 1999 I sold stuff on eBay. All sorts of stuff. I sold Electronics, designer sunglasses that I got "gray market," shoes (brand name and otherwise), soaps, and basically every piece of plastic garbage made by humans you can imagine. I had over 100,000 feedback at one point and revenues of like $3.7 million per year. I had 4 employees. It was a nice little gig. But around 2006 you saw Chinese fakes start abounding, and they changed their fee model, and it really wasn't even the fakes that were so m

  • by sacrilicious ( 316896 ) <qbgfynfu.opt@recursor.net> on Monday February 06, 2017 @12:46PM (#53812433) Homepage

    It is certainly true that consumers, particularly low-income consumers, like getting free or subsidized data plans. There is no doubt about that. But when the subsidies are coming from the big tech companies, who can easily pay them, to buy competitive advantage over that nimble startup that is scaring them, well we know how that movie ends.

    I really object to this person's writing style, which repeatedly seeks to put words in others' mouths rather than proposing facts and backing them up with cites as appropriate. "We all know" that that's the writing style of someone who may well be running a spin game rather than an information dissemination game. I want to be informed, not pushed into going along for the ride.

  • Fred is easily one of the stupidest people I've ever interacted with. You shouldn't waste your time reading anything he's got to say. Even a stopped clock is correct twice a day, doesn't mean you should spend 12 hours looking at it waiting for something correct to come from it.

  • A free market isn't free. If we want a free market to persist thru generations, we need to outlaw monopolies and make sure the playing field is level for everyone. For those who wish to do their own analysis of how economies actually work, here's a koan to cogitate on.

    Either billionaires produce a robust economy OR billionaires are a product of a robust economy.

    The Libertarians had this idea that we could all buy insurance to protect each other, but they didn't actually explain how we can guarantee the

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