Yes, I work in the industry. Flash boys is misleading garbage, it's a long form advertisement for IEX.
What a broker does has nothing to do with how market orders work. The strategy you're describing also doesn't really work because any respectable broker is sweeping all of the exchanges at once - the regulations considered this possibility and allowed this behavior. Also, many of the liquid symbols have single cent spreads making this strategy impossible.
Then this whole discussion is nonsensical since in almost all cases retail orders are directly filled by wholesale market makers and don't ever land on the exchanges (and don't see any 'frontrunning' as a result).
Sure. All I was saying is that it's theoretically possible for a market order that a customer submits online to be front-run (as opposed to a market order submitted to a single exchange). No clue how often it happens in practice.
It's theoretically possible and has always been for somebody to see order execution in progress and trade ahead of it. In practice, that's frequently just a side effect of somebody being so slow that their actions trigger quant algorithms, it's not a super profitable game trying to latency arb proper market sweeps anymore (not to say latency is not important in but, but it's usually for other reasons)
What a broker does has nothing to do with how market orders work. The strategy you're describing also doesn't really work because any respectable broker is sweeping all of the exchanges at once - the regulations considered this possibility and allowed this behavior. Also, many of the liquid symbols have single cent spreads making this strategy impossible.