Power is power, and power needs to be accountable to those subject to that power. A company that makes commodity screws and bolts has no power over me: I can find a different commodity screw and bolt company. A company providing key tech infrastructure had quite a bit of power over me. We live in an information society. Why should a few people in the bay area unilaterally get to kick people out of that society?
Common carrier regulations on railroads provide a model for regulating critical tech infrastructure that happens to be privately held. I'm as big a fan as it gets of the capitalist market-based way of organizing society, but even I acknowledge that at large scales, companies need to play by a different set of rules, one that makes them accountable to the public. The alternative is essentially the subversion of democracy. You can take a purist approach to corporate autonomy all the way to its natural feudal end, but I'm not going with you.
Common carrier regulations on railroads provide a model for regulating critical tech infrastructure that happens to be privately held. I'm as big a fan as it gets of the capitalist market-based way of organizing society, but even I acknowledge that at large scales, companies need to play by a different set of rules, one that makes them accountable to the public. The alternative is essentially the subversion of democracy. You can take a purist approach to corporate autonomy all the way to its natural feudal end, but I'm not going with you.