> You avoided the important part, there is no market for hardware that can play Nintendo Switch games and there is no market for software providers on Nintendo Switch.
There is a market for these things. Nintendo sells hardware that can play Nintendo Switch games and people buy it. That's a market.
It seems like you're trying to claim that a monopoly isn't a market, but how can that possibly be how antitrust laws work? Your argument is that they don't apply to something if it is a monopoly?
> And they are legally allowed to do that.
That's just assuming the conclusion. Why should it be legal for them to exclude competitors from selling software to their customers? The obviously anti-competitive thing should obviously be a violation of any sane laws prohibiting anti-competitive practices. The insanity is the number of people trying to defend the practice.
Consider what it implies. 20th century GE could have gone around buying houses, installing a GE electrical panel and then selling the houses with a covenant that no one could use a non-GE appliance in that house ever again, or plug in any device that runs on electricity without their permission. They could buy and sell half of all the housing stock in the country and Westinghouse the other half and each add that covenant and you're claiming it wouldn't be an antitrust violation.
Apple wouldn't have been able to get their start because they'd have needed permission from GE or Westinghouse for customers to plug in an Apple II or charge an iPhone and they wouldn't get it because those companies were selling mainframes or flip phones and wouldn't want the competition. If that's not an antitrust violation then we don't have antitrust laws.
> If they did they would be declaring all locked down hardware effectively illegal.
It's fine for hardware to be locked down by and with the specific permission of the person who owns it. But how is it even controversial for the manufacturer locking down hardware for the purpose of excluding competitors to be a violation of the laws against inhibiting competition? It's exactly the thing those laws are supposed to be prohibiting.
There is a market for these things. Nintendo sells hardware that can play Nintendo Switch games and people buy it. That's a market.
It seems like you're trying to claim that a monopoly isn't a market, but how can that possibly be how antitrust laws work? Your argument is that they don't apply to something if it is a monopoly?
> And they are legally allowed to do that.
That's just assuming the conclusion. Why should it be legal for them to exclude competitors from selling software to their customers? The obviously anti-competitive thing should obviously be a violation of any sane laws prohibiting anti-competitive practices. The insanity is the number of people trying to defend the practice.
Consider what it implies. 20th century GE could have gone around buying houses, installing a GE electrical panel and then selling the houses with a covenant that no one could use a non-GE appliance in that house ever again, or plug in any device that runs on electricity without their permission. They could buy and sell half of all the housing stock in the country and Westinghouse the other half and each add that covenant and you're claiming it wouldn't be an antitrust violation.
Apple wouldn't have been able to get their start because they'd have needed permission from GE or Westinghouse for customers to plug in an Apple II or charge an iPhone and they wouldn't get it because those companies were selling mainframes or flip phones and wouldn't want the competition. If that's not an antitrust violation then we don't have antitrust laws.
> If they did they would be declaring all locked down hardware effectively illegal.
It's fine for hardware to be locked down by and with the specific permission of the person who owns it. But how is it even controversial for the manufacturer locking down hardware for the purpose of excluding competitors to be a violation of the laws against inhibiting competition? It's exactly the thing those laws are supposed to be prohibiting.