- In economics, a good is said to be
rivalrous or a
rival if its
consumption by one
consumer prevents simultaneous consumption by
other consumers, or if...
-
which prevent other consumers from
consuming them.
Private goods are also
rivalrous because one good in
private ownership cannot be used by
someone else....
-
sometimes classified as a
subtype of
public goods that are
excludable but non-
rivalrous, at
least until reaching a
point where congestion occurs.
Often these...
- good or
collective good) is a good that is both non-excludable and non-
rivalrous. Use by one
person neither prevents access by
other people, nor does it...
-
private goods (excludable and
rivalrous goods like a phone), as well as
public goods (non-excludable and non-
rivalrous goods, like air), respectively...
- have not paid for it from
using the good or
consuming its benefits; and
rivalrous, i.e.
consumption by one
necessarily prevents that of another. A private...
- this sense,
exploits are non-excludable but they can or can not be non-
rivalrous, as the more
users use a zero day
exploit after a
certain point, the more...
- good (economics), an
economic good that is both non-excludable and non-
rivalrous The
common good,
outcomes that are
beneficial for all or most members...
-
record in existence".
Economists have
noted that
Facebook offers many non-
rivalrous services that
benefit as many
users as are
interested without forcing...
-
called common-pool resources) are
defined in
economics as
goods that are
rivalrous and non-excludable. Thus, they
constitute one of the four main
types based...