Apple Eases Rules For Subscription Apps 109
pjfontillas writes "Apple has quietly reversed their decision that required publishers who sell content and subscriptions in their iPhone and iPad apps to go through iTunes, with Apple taking a 30% cut. It's not so quiet in the workplace, however, as this news has a pretty big influence on developer workloads. Here at The New York Times our developers breathed a sigh of relief once we realized we don't have try and work around that requirement like The Financial Times did. Apple seems to have been doing much better with their community (consumers and developers alike) recently."
Reader imamac notes that Apple has also filed a motion to intervene in the Lodsys patent suit against several iOS app developers that we've been following.
Re: (Score:3)
Financial Times announced a web application and killed their app store subscription app.
Re: (Score:2)
No, as the HTML 5 proponents say, HTML 5 can do everything native apps can do. Now watch me remake Crysis 2 using the untapped powers of Canvas, SVG and Javascript...
TFS (Score:2)
Gee. It's almost like some over-controlling jerk in upper management must be out sick, or something.
Re: (Score:1)
Microphone and camera in Safari yet? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Why would they do that? They want people to use web apps. Apple is at the forefront of HTML5.
Re: (Score:2)
Apple had explicitly suggested that developers who don't like Apple's terms for apps, so I doubt if this was a major factor. But it was always clear that the rules would have to be modified, because as previously formatted, they would have required firms like Amazon, which already had an efficient system for selling content to pay a hefty price for a service that they didn't really need, and a Web Kindle app would not be and adequate substitute for the Kindle app. Forcing the Kindle app off of iOS would hav
Re: (Score:2)
I read the actual Financial Times article about this and they stated the cost savings by going the web app route was 5x what they figured originally. The explanation is that the web app is platform independant, meaning they have only one code base to maintain instead of apps for each and every app store
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, they saved money by only making one app instead of two. They also are leaving money on the table by not giving their consumers what they want.
Re:Surprising (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, look at the exorbitant fees they are charging for iCloud ($0) and for Lion ($29). It's just ridiculous.
Re: (Score:1)
Let's see if I charge a gazillion dollars for the hardware I can charge nothing for iCloud and little for Lion. But hey who did that before? Microsoft! You know the evil corporation, yet Apple is all goodness!
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, that's great.... if you charge a gazillion dollars for the hardware. Apart from the Mac Pro, which is overpriced, the hardware is pretty comparable with similar hardware on the "pc" side.
If you want bottom-of-the-barrel razor-thin-profit-margin junk though, like the lowest end Dell or other cheap machine, then such is life. If you want a decent machine (on either side of the OS spectrum), the prices are comparable - especially recently with increases in the GPU offerings.
Re: (Score:2)
The claim was that apple was charging "everybody for everything." In point of fact, icloud is a thing, and when I use it, I will not be charged. The claim is wrong. QED.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
5 GB free, plus all purchased items. It also includes all the capabilities of mobile me which was $99/year.
Re: (Score:2)
Because they have to pay the labels and studios.
Re: (Score:2)
They're only charging $0 if your media is through iTunes. Any other media you may want to store on the cloud will require a $24.99 a year subscription.
Ooooo! $25 a fucking YEAR! How moneygrubbing!
Gimme a break.
Re: (Score:3)
Yes, because Win95>98 and 2000 > XP > Vista > 7 were all "updates" right? Not even "service patches".
What reality do you live in?
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
So windows before 2000 was not just bug fixes, and afterwords is not just new clothes on the same OS? You could have fooled me.
Re: (Score:3)
Yeah between those versions Apple added : iChat, Safari, FileVault, Exposé, Fast User Switching, Spotlight, Dashboard, Quicktime 7, Quicktime X, Automator, VoiceOver, Core Image, Core Video, Rosetta, Time Machine, Spaces, BootCamp, Grand Central, LauchPad, Mission Control, Quartz Composer, etc., etc. But you know, other than that you're right it's the same system.
Re: (Score:3)
I'll just link to the post that already replied to you: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2228992&cid=36405510 [slashdot.org]
"What Windows has to do with it" is something called a "direct comparison".
You are saying "I am trying to say that even $30 is too expensive, when it is just an tiny update. It even looks the same as it used to." - when the "look" of Win 95 to Win 98 didn't change, for example. Not that changing the look entirely needs to happen for an OS to be considered a new version (you're seriously going
Re: (Score:1)
To say those were service patches shows your ignorance and bias. Sell your crazy someplace else!
Re: (Score:2)
What does windows have to do with what I said? Stay focused. "Cheetah", "Puma", "Jaguar", "Panther", "Tiger", "Leopard", "Snow Leopard" & "Lion" are all the same operating system, and you have to pay for every friggin update. I am trying to say that even $30 is too expensive, when it is just an tiny update. It even looks the same as it used to. Service patches and updates are free from Microsoft, if you want to drag them into it. I never even mentioned them, and I'm pretty sure the jumps in Microsoft's OS's evolve in a wide berth, since the jump from 95 & 98 to 2000 involved going back to the NT architecture, which was changed dramatically for XP and Vista.
There are many, many, many changes under the hood in your progression of OS X versions.
Each year at WWDC, Jobs gets up and talks about al the new features, APIs, and other changes. And yet, because they have kept a relatively consistent look-and-feel, you discount it all as "Service Patches".
I have something to tell you: This has nothing to do with "Service Patches". Apple pushes those out at a fairly consistent rate, and for free. Always has, always will. Instead, each of these OS updates actually intr
Re: (Score:2)
They used to charge for mobile me, it didn't work well, but people paid for it anyways. icloud does the same stuff and more.
They obviously could have charged for icloud if they wanted to, but they didn't. Keep in mind, I'm arguing against, "Apple seems to be big on money grabbing from everybody for everything lately." I'd say that lately, they are not into that.
Lion is "just an update"? airdrop, autosave, versions, resume, customizable gestures are all new.
But isn't airdrop really stupid? Yes, you could do
Re: (Score:1)
Apple changed its policies back because of money too. They realized that this move would damage their reputation and drive developers away from iOS.
Re: (Score:2)
I am pretty shocked at this. Apple seems to be big on money grabbing from everybody for everything lately.
Apple doesn't primarily run their Music and App stores as a profit center. They exist to add value to their main products, which are hardware.
Apple makes more profit overall about every four months than they have made in total revenue from their 30% cuts in all iTunes stores combined since they first opened. And that's before taking into considerations the costs of running, maintaining, improving, etc., their stores, as well as covering the credit card fees, and licensing patents like Amazon's One-Click pat
Could it be?? (Score:1)
They're finally realizing that their restrictive practices are a little too restrictive?
Crazy talk, I know...
Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)
Nah, just too fast. They'll back off, wait a few months, then ease in with the same restrictions, maybe with a couple of intermediate steps in between so that people can rationalize it to themselves better. It's the exact same way you avoid outrage while increasing gas prices, removing citizens rights, etc...
Re: (Score:1)
No, what it is is what it has always been. They respond to what they perceive their target market wants. Internet bitching from nerds who hate them isn't really a factor in their strategy.
Re: (Score:2)
Right, they are "too restrictive". So restrictive, in fact, that iOS is the most popular "app-style" mobile OS. I mean, iOS is just *hurting* for users and developers!
This isn't a sign that Apple is going to change their overall policy. Their overall policy is working out fantastic for them. This just shows that Apple will do what Apple has always done when something doesn't work out, they'll change it.
The original purpose of the clause was to make In App purchasing something end users could trust in and us
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
....And then you can get a letter from Patent Ventures for 0.05% of your revenue to use UI buttons to actuate numerical addition in your app. And then a letter from Intellectual Troll Partners for $30 flat in order to use shake gestures to delete app objects. And then Fraunhofer can ask for 1% because you're encoding an MP3 with Apple's implementation of their codec (sure Apple licensed it, but now that they see you'll roll over, maybe they think that license doesn't apply to phones all of the sudden, and
I am not usually a gramer Nazi, but... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I am not usually a gramer Nazi, but... (Score:5, Funny)
I can't decide if a grammar Nazi making a spelling mistake on the word "grammar" (as "gramer") is ironic or requires the arrival of spelling Nazis.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I hope it requires the arrival of more misspelling grammar Nazis, so they all can get stuck in an infinite recursion.
Re: (Score:2)
And a grammar mistake to boot: "How exactly does a sentence [...] ends up having..."
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Sadly, I read the news often (both online and in dead tree format) ... I see an astonishing amount of evidence that even people who work for major news media are slipping in their ability to write properly.
I see typos, misuse of their/there, and plenty of other things ... I think grammar and spelling seem to be in decline everywhere. Time was, these guys were the ones who really knew the
Re: (Score:1)
Not to mention the shocking amount of using the wrong spelling of a word that slips through anymore, like they're/their/there, then/than, accept/except.
My English Comp professor used to outright reject papers with more than 2 or 3 errors like this...people complained, but really, how hard is it to proofread something before you submit it? Apparently damn hard...
Re: (Score:2)
Well, if the little red squiggle shows up, you typed it wrong, what else it there to know? :-P
Wee went their too sea if they're was anything two bee scene ... that would pass a spell checker. It's almost gibberish unless you say it outloud and ignore the words as written.
If you simply don't know th
Re: (Score:2)
My favourite one is how journalists, particularly TV reporters, love to talk about people being evacuated. I know it can be hard to control one's bowels when faced with extreme danger but I'm pretty sure that's not what they meant.
Re: (Score:2)
My favourite one is how journalists, particularly TV reporters, love to talk about people being evacuated. I know it can be hard to control one's bowels when faced with extreme danger but I'm pretty sure that's not what they meant.
I like The Wire, too, but this little joke was just something they trumped up for TV. Merriam-Webster gives one definition of evacuate [merriam-webster.com] as: "to withdraw from a place in an organized way especially for protection." David Simon says [nymag.com] he put it into the show as an homage to one of his copy editors who used to give him a hard time about it; nonetheless, the usage is perfectly fine.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You are a disappointment to grammar nazis everywhere. Please turn in your membership card.
Re: (Score:2)
Sorry, you need to log in to the NYTimes site to access the grammatically correct version
Bravo to Apple on Lodsys (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
I was aware that Lodsys was also suing Android developers [bgr.com], but what does Microsoft have to do about this right now?
This actually might be an interesting differentiation strategy -- if Apple can show that it will go to bat for its developers, then Google is obliged to do at least as much, or else Android begins to look unsafe. It's sortof sick (or interesting) to think that a legal team and patent indemnification has now become a part of a computing platform as important as the APIs, the brand and the marke
Re: (Score:2)
I'd go with "interesting" over sick. If you made alternators instead of software, indemnification would be a necessary part of your business plan to begin with. Software patent litigation is actually only a small part of the field of patent litigation, and despite what you see on slashdot, it's comparatively rare. You average run-of-the-mill patent dispute is much more likely to be about components in a pea-combiner or an x-ray source than it is going to be about the use of a specific codec.
With that sai
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe Google doesn't have a license to the patent in question ? Apple's whole case rests on the fact that they had a cross-licensing deal with the company Lodsys bought the patents from and that prevents developers from being sued for using the technology Apple has built that implements said patent.
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe Google doesn't have a license to the patent in question ?
It does, [lodsys.com] as does Microsoft.
Android (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1, Funny)
iPhone already is the only credible smartphone on the market.
Re: (Score:2)
iPhone already is the only credible smartphone on the market.
Does that make their competitors incredible?
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, because they never improved their iPods!
The reason Google got into the smartphone OS business is because they want a customer base to sell to advertisers. And in fact, the reverse is true, in terms of the impact of competition. The iPhone made Android what it is today. Android went from a BlackBerry clone to an iPhone clone after the iPhone came out.
Apple is Apple's best competitor. When, since 1997, has Apple ever just sat around and rested on its laurels?
Re: (Score:2)
Google bought Android before the iPhone was introduced. During Google's development, but before the iPhone was publicly shown, it was a BlackBerry like system, with a keyboard and a standard BlackBerry-like screen that took up the top half of the phone. It didn't have a touch UI. Then the iPhone was introduced, and not long afterwards, Android become just another iPhone clone.
As for Kindle & Nook being any sort of threat to Apple, that's laughable. I wouldn't be remotely surprised to find out Amazon sel
Protecting their bottom line (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple has made tons of money already from their mandated royalties, and I think they are just feeling worried and trying to assuage old grudges of their partners in preparation for the next waves of real competition.
Re: (Score:1)
Nothing cynical about protecting their bottom line. Virtually everything Apple (or any other company does) has to consider how this affects sales and profits. That's just what companies do: they produce something I like more than I like the money in my pocket. We make a trade, everyone's happy. If they fail, I keep the money, I'm happy, they're out of business.
The beauty of competition is it forces companies to do things I like even if they're not thrilled about it.
Re: (Score:2)
Apple has made tons of money already from their mandated royalties, and I think they are just feeling worried and trying to assuage old grudges of their partners in preparation for the next waves of real competition.
Apple makes almost nothing from their 30% cut. And you vastly overestimate the threat Apple faces. The part about Windows 8 taking on the iPad was especially amusing.
They make their money by selling hardware to their customers. Everything they do is about making their hardware and software more appealing to these very same customers. It's not "cynical" to alter your product to be more appealing.
Re: (Score:2)
The devil is in the details (Score:5, Informative)
Note that the devil is in the details.
While Apple will
They're still bound to some rules:
In other words.. they can offer the subscription elsewhere, but they're not allowed to make it easy for users to pick up said subscription.
It's still an improvement (for publishers, for users I'm sure the proposed earlier method was already ideal) as publishers can now at least offset the Apple take through price differentiation - but it still has its idiosyncrasies.
Re: (Score:2)
Publishers will just tell people to subscribe to their mobile formatted website, and maybe provide an app that does little more than frame the HTML. They don't make anything like 30% on their subscriptions so unless users are willing to pay 30% extra over a web subscription... Well, actually I think a fair few users would pay that just to get a special iPad formatted app or something, just because it makes them feel like it is specially for their prized possession rather than a generic web site that dirty A
Re: (Score:2)
So far as I can see, placing a button that would open subscription management website in Mobile Safari would conform to the rules. For practical purposes, it's good enough.
Somebody Found the Sanity Token? (Score:1)
In any company, there's always somebody who has the "Sanity Token" and is
therefore actually *thinking* about the consequences. Apparently a party or parties
unknown in corporate finally realized that sodomizing your developer community
is a massively suboptimal long-term strategy.
Break up Apple (Score:1)
Apple's gotten too big. It's got a major case of left-hand not knowing what right-hand is doing. It's almost a culture.
Re:Break up Apple (Score:5, Funny)
Right. Because the one thing we all can agree on about Apple is that it's an unorganized mess without a strong controlling central authority.
Re: (Score:1)
that is actually how you get right-hand/left-hand problems. lack of distributed connectivity.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
No, he was being sarcastic. I was disagreeing with him. So suck that back in.
Break up Apple? On what grounds? (Score:5, Interesting)
Apple's gotten too big. It's got a major case of left-hand not knowing what right-hand is doing. It's almost a culture.
Gotten too big? By what arbitrary standard could that be decided? Because you don't like Apple?
Please give even a single instance of "left-hand not knowing what right-hand is doing" where Apple is concerned. That's about as far from reality as you can get in Apple's case. Not only is their integration working remarkably well for them, but their focus is almost terrifying in it's scope. Everything Apple does informs everything else, from the design of their hardware, software, and retail stores, to the thrust of their advertising and their carefully managed public image. That is their culture, which is diametrically opposed to your assertion. You're really describing Microsoft, with their multiple competing fiefdoms.
When Apple first announced their guidelines for subscriptions and the publishers protested in outrage, I predicted in a discussion that Apple would change them before they went into effect. I argued at the time that it seemed to me that Apple were merely floating a trial balloon to see how far they could push, and were probably well prepared in advance to exercise some flexibility. This also works for them, because they can then give the public impression that they're prepared to be reasonable, when in fact they had probably planned internally for less stringent terms. As I said, Apple manages their public image with extreme care, and I wouldn't be in the least bit surprised that they pushed their original terms knowing full well that they had no intention of implementing them. In fact I would argue that they would have been surprised if they had been widely accepted.
Re: (Score:1)
So because of your fealty to Apple, you refuse to believe that this was a mistake. "Yeah, they meant to do that."
Re: (Score:2)
Quietly? Seriously? The Press cracks me up (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I think you forgot to read the summary.
Re: (Score:2)
More like Apple == Apple. Throughout their history, they've been hell-bent on proprietary hardware and proprietary software to run on it.
opensource.apple.com
Apple has even initiated their own open source projects. And their hardware is based on open standards and industry standards, including standards that Apple themselves have made available to third parties.
You are right, though, that "Apple == Apple", but they are neither completely open, or completely closed. They are user-centric, with a focus on "normal" people. That's the one, main constant at Apple, and also why they are so phenomenally successful. It's also why this "Apple is super