Preface: this question is not about "having a go" at StackOverflow and is not a defence of expert-sex-change.com, which I have never used. It is purely a question about whether SO, if it is running at a loss (an assumption of mine, which may be wrong), will eventually fall foul of competiion law. I think it is an interesting question, which is why I asked it.
It seems to me that Joel et al. are using their own money to attempt to blast "the site with the hyphen" out of the water by undercutting them on price (quite severely!). If this were Rupert Murdoch in the newspaper industry, we would call the practice anti-competitive and a regulator might decide that it was illegal.
Could a competition regulator find stackoverflow guilty of illegal business practices, at least until SO breaks even? Is what SO is doing fair on "the site with the hyphen"?
EDIT: to recap, anti-competition laws about predatory pricing are about running a business at a loss (i.e. unsustainably) in order to put a competitor out of business. You can give away stuff for free (like free newspapers) but only if this is sustainable (i.e. you are generating enough advertising revenue to match your costs). Typically you will be given some leeway to run at a loss for a short period of time.
EDIT2: I am assuming that, for the moment, SO is running at a loss. Certainly this would have been the case when it started, it may not be the case now of course. The last talk by Joel I listened to, I believe he referred to it not yet breaking even (please correct me if I'm wrong).
EDIT3: I belive that predatory pricing can be levelled at a company which produces a product for free but intends to make money from that product via some other channel - such as advertising. A monopoly can charge more for advertising and thus attempt to gain a monopoly via predatory pricing could certainly be construed as anti-competitive.
Note: I am not a member of "the site with a hyphen" and clearly a supporter of SO!
