Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 1st Jun 2011 22:38 UTC
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Member since:
2011-01-28
Berend de Boer,
"Bad example: Amazon has entered into examples with ISPs to give customers 'free' access to the Amazon site, i.e. Whispernet."
You're talking about the amazon kindle, right?
It's an interesting business model.
"Magazines, newspapers and blogs via RSS are provided by Amazon per a monthly subscription fee or a free trial period. Newspaper subscriptions cost from US$1.99 to $27.99 per month; magazines charge between $1.25 and $10.99 per month, and blogs charge from $0.99 to $1.99 per month."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Kindle
They do charge owners a per megabyte fee for transfer of personal documents to the kindle over 3G.
Of course you mention amazon's own site being free for users. Should they be allowed to do that?
I would argue "no" unless competitor's services are also available for the same price (aka "free").
The reasoning is that if this approach were scaled up to more and more providers such that it became the norm, the web would become fragmented. Users would have to use the services endorsed by their ISPs instead of the services which best suit them. ISP customers would be for sale to the highest bidder. Small publishers/developers would be excluded from the market and users would ultimately end up with fewer choices, less innovation, and stronger monopolies.