I understand what you are writing, but the sentiment is not helpful. Competition is not related to compatibility. There is no need to constrain one with the other. Some competition leads to incompatibility which is best for the consumer, some doesn’t. You can’t tell until the market has been given a chance to have its say. When companies coalesce around a design which was previously incompatible with other standards, that is how you know the market is having its say.
I think the big difference here is that NACS is a Tesla connection, and all of which are at Tesla superchargers, which if the industry uses that would hand the charging network to Tesla, unless Tesla allows everyone to use their connector.
So unless the NACS connector is free for any other company to use, then competition is being infringed, regardless of how good the connector is.
I’m mean, when that happens, that’s great, but in practice most of the time firms use licensing and legal barriers to prevent interoperability and competition. Just look at the utter mess that is video calling.
Yes, there’s a grey area where a new connector might be innovation, but usually a custom connector is an anti-competitive move.