[kictanet] The Case Against Google and other Tech Titans

Barrack Otieno otieno.barrack at gmail.com
Mon Feb 26 14:13:14 EAT 2018


Hi Ali,

I also think one of the reasons Safaricom enjoys its position is its
willingness to engage despite the criticism it receives, in as much as
we feel sorry for the other operators they hardly engage with
stakeholders. In short Safaricom seems to have public interest at the
core of its strategy which might not be the case with other local
Telcos or tech giants.

Best Regards

On 2/26/18, Ali Hussein via kictanet <kictanet at lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
> Listers
>
> Here’s an interesting long read on the implications of Technology enabled
> Monopolies.
>
> The argument for and against the thesis that only market forces can check
> the monopolistic behaviors of the Tech Giants is well articulated in this NY
> Times article.
>
> The argument goes like:-
>
> A combination of Activists (Listers, I hope you are listening and reading
> 😀), Anti-Trust Busters, Competitors and the cautious actions of so called
> Monopolists when the spotlight hits them, is largely responsible for
> ensuring that consumers and the markets operate honestly, responsibly and
> with the profit motive in mind.
>
> Couldn’t help me thinking whether this combination is partly responsible for
> the New Safaricom we are seeing today.  A company that is arguably larger
> than life in Kenya and who in the recent past has been accused of the same
> behaviors that the Tech Giants are allegedly guilty of.
>
> Safaricom is definitely a better company than it was just a few years
> before. They have embraced the ecosystem, released M-Pesa APIs on Github
> (Yes!), funds startups in the Tech Ecosystem through its Spark Fund and is
> generally easier to work with.
>
> Here’s an excerpt to the story:-
>
> The implication is clear enough: Google and the other tech titans understand
> that the landscape is shifting. They realize that their halos have become
> tarnished, that the arguments they once invoked as a digital exception to
> American economic history — that the internet economy is uniquely
> self-correcting, because competition is only a click away — no longer hold
> as much weight. “When you get as big as Google, you become so powerful that
> the market bends around you,” ...
>
> Read on:-
>
> https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/20/magazine/the-case-against-google.html
>
> @Walu, we can meet half way on our arguments on this issue. :-)
>
> Regards
>
> Ali Hussein
> Principal
> Hussein & Associates
> +254 0713 601113
>
> Twitter: @AliHKassim
> Skype: abu-jomo
> LinkedIn: http://ke.linkedin.com/in/alihkassim
>
> "We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, therefore, is not an act but a
> habit."  ~ Aristotle
>
>
> Sent from my iPad


-- 
Barrack O. Otieno
+254721325277
+254733206359
Skype: barrack.otieno
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