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Apple Businesses

Apple's Ad Agency Goes After Mac Rumour Sites 164

lythari writes "ZDNet is reporting that Apple's advertising agency is threatening several publications carrying Apple ads to stop printing Apple rumours or else Apple will stop advertising with them. " Hmmm...can you say "Bad Karma"?
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Apple's Ad Agency Goes After Mac Rumour Sites

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  • Not only do I agree with you, but in reality, it's not really a rumour if it's true.. I hope one of these companies does continue to post rumours and takes them to court. This is a case that Apple couldn't win.
  • The point was...
    It was a computer for my mother, my grandmother, uncle fred. Why would they need a debugger? they wanted little pictures.
    but then again... why am I bothering to respond to some phony elite twerp.
    to them its a freekin toaster. they have no passion for this thing you can't function without. It's a toaster and the mac made white toast.
  • It's a common tactic. The sites are publishing *rumor*. They're not publishing *fact*. It's fairly common to threaten to pull advertising to stop what is percieved as bad press. Apple's just (IMHO) trying to control how information about themselves is released to the press.

    Get a grip, people. Apple's just a company, doing regular company stuff. They percieve possible damage, they do damage control. Big deal.
  • Bad Karma, and a big mistake. The rumors sites are some of Apple's best advertising.
    Advertising is good only if it entices people to buy product. The problem with rumors sites is that they often reveal news of products that are coming down the pipe with a price/performance metric significantly better than the current price/performance metric... and there's always a product coming down the pipe. Compound that with macosrumors.com and appleinsider.com's rather umm... unique... concept of truth (Apple will release a 16 processor G4 system for under 2 grand in January. What sayeth you Magic 8 Ball?) and the advertisement only hurts apple sales.

    I'm not saying that Apple is right in what they're doing, it would be better for them to just leak ridiculous rumors and a) undermine their credibility and b) fire any paid employees who leak secrets.

  • all publications should stop talking about Apple period. No more regurgitation of self-serving press-releases as news, no more bullshit corporate spin as commentary, no more free advertising in the form of product reviews

    Ummm, what?

    I think Slashdot should from this point forward replace the Apple icon in its stories with a photo of Steve Jobs in Stalin's moustache.

    This really underlines an important point. Despite what people might think, Apple is not a government. It is a for-profit company. Apple is not responsible for the coverup of the discovery of aliens. Jobs did not assissinate JFK. They're not trying to prevent you from watching DVDs on Linux, or even preventing you from downloading Metallica MP3s.

    ALL Apple is doing is deciding to not pay the people that are taking information on their unannounced products (some that may never even make it to market), and selling it in a magazine for personal gain. Most of these magazines and online publications are for-profit organizations. They are taking something from Apple, and attempting to make a quick buck off it. Why would Apple continue to buy advertising from these people? I don't see anything immoral about this. They're voting with their checkbook.

    He's better than Bill, alright--even a better power-drunk, paranoid Tyrant.

    What's amusing is that Gates is doing such a good job at what he does that you actually believe Apple/Jobs is more harmful to the industry/society than Microsoft/Gates. When was the last time Microsoft released an open source OS, of any kind? Or an open source streaming media server? How much innovation has Microsoft really brought to the industry?

    - Scott

    ------
    Scott Stevenson
  • if i wanted a next, i would have bought a next. obviously A LOT of people didn't want a next. else we'd all have them on our desktops.

    Funny, I thought it had more to do with the extreme price of the NeXT cubes, and the fact that you had to buy hardware. (The same reason BeBox never went far.)

    Apple survived because they had a niche in the graphics market, even though they also forced you to buy hardware. NeXT didn't really have a niche, AFAIK.

    beauty is only skin deep. cube looks great, and tons of problems. aqua looked "lickable" but worked horrible.

    What exactly are the "tons of problems" with cubes? As for Aqua working horribly, I've never heard that. Then again, it's a matter of taste.

    Personally, I like BeOS best.

    -thomas


    "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."
  • Well with all the stuff going on with Rambus, I think this is just Apple taking steps to make sure they retain the title of Most Litigation-Happy Company Ever.

    Ummm, nobody is suing anybody in this story. Apple just doesn't want to keep giving money to the people that are pre-announcing their products for them.

    - Scott

    ------
    Scott Stevenson
  • by DrgnDancer ( 137700 ) on Friday September 15, 2000 @06:23AM (#777336) Homepage

    Apple can spend their advertizing dollars where ever they want, but not spending them at the rumors sites would be stupid. Further, trying to stop the rumor sites is stupid. Consider:

    1) People that use Macs are often fanatics (I am not using the word in a bad way, I simply mean that people that buy Macs tend to be "Mac owners" people that buy PC's (with a number of exception) tend to be "people that have computers"). They actually are interested in their platform above and beyond its usefulness as a tool.

    2) Because of this they tend to hang around on Mac sites (rumor based or otherwise). They enjoy these sites, they like to learn about their platform.

    3) By carrying out this threat Apple is doing three things (Well, more than that, but I choose to list these three): Pissing off the people that own, run and work on the sites, most of whom are Mac fans and users, but may well turn against a company that repeatedly treats them like crap. Pissing off users who will have to either watch their favorite sites cave and become less interesting or stand up and loose money, all because of a company that both the user and the site try to support. Loosing advertiseing eyeballs in a group that is most suseptable to buying their product.

    So basically they are choosing a route that decreases the value of their marketing and risks alienating some of their greatest supporters in an effort to control rumors, which as often as not serve as advertising in and of themselves. Do we see a hole in this theory?

  • Two birds with one stone here.

    Instead of taking the hard way out of the rumors (building better products), Apple decided to take the easy, stereotypical, "corporate ultimatum" way out.

    Exactly. Well put, and a lesson we all could apply in everyday life. The hard way is to repair yourself. The easy way is to blame others. Period.

    And, regarding karma. The misapplication of karma was bothering me until the writer from India clarified it, and I realized the misapplication is actually simple a neologism, and therefore I now like it! Karma is being used like a void pointer because the conversation is not Indian, but is now going beyond the narrow definition of karma which is applied by people who specialize in it. Thank God for idiots.

    The beauty of ignorance is that it can recreate a more functional version of something as limited as karma by simply misunderstanding it. "Karma" as it is used lately here has none of the implications of reincarnation, which is a limited and finite way of looking at things. I prefer the more infinite version that is attached to ONE lifetime, with eternal consequences. That makes what we do here less bound to karma, and more bound to grace. -Water Paradox

  • Cloning was never set up properly. They should have had the clone makers go after markets that Apple didn't, instead they ended up cannibalizing Apple sales.

    B.S.
    Apple's downturn in sales of that era dwarfed the number of clones sold. Unless people were choosing to buy 1 PowerTower instead of the 10 PowerMacs they'd been planning to buy before, you need to find another explanation.

    Besides, cloners were paying license fees. If the issue had *really* been sales loss, Apple could have just set the license fee equal to their expected profit on the version of the machine that the clone would have competed with. Instead, Apple just pulled the plug on the program.

  • families can get hooked up to the internet with a comptuer (sic) that is easy to use and doesn't have shit hardware (like those compaqs they sell at wallmart) for around 800 bucks....

    Trouble is, though, Apple has cut some serious corners on their once immaculate quality. The new iMacs are made by GOLDSTAR in Korea. Now if that isn't a schlock house, I don't know what is. Then again, they aren't alone...IBM is now pimping the once mighty Thinkpad name to Acer, and guess what? The A and i Series of Thinkpads are crap.

    Apple's hardware used to be the standard other computers were measured by. Why do people collect old Macs? Because they are STILL USEFUL MACHINES. And they were BUILT. People still use IIfxes and SE/30s because they are tough little customers.

    Hell, I love my LCIII+ (actually a Performa460, built before Performa = crap) because it is an useful machine that with its FPU installed can actually run Photoshop 3 at a usable speed. It's small...7 pounds for the CPU. It's efficient...uses about as much energy as a table lamp. Maybe I can't play Quake on it or watch Flash movies on it or play MP3s, but I used the thing to build websites up until I got my G3.

    The pro-level Macs, the G3s and G4s and Powerbooks, are still made with the kind of craftsmanship that made Apple's bones. But my friend's iMacDV is a total freakin' lemon that requires use in almost a refrigerator environment because The Steve doesn't like case fans. Fsck that.

    --.\\<-H--

  • The problem is that while Microsoft tries to throw it's weight around, it works because Microsoft is well-rooted in computing, and they're huge, so they can technically get away with a majority of dirty tricks.

    Apple tries to throw it's weight around... but wait, what weight? They end up just shooting themselves in the foot because they've got so little leverage.

    Sounds to me a bit like a company-sized ego problem.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    i'm a die-hard apple fan, or at least i was. i go back to a 128 in 1984 and a //e in 1980.

    How'd you manage to have a //e three years before they were released? That's a pretty good trick.

  • Exactly!

    Fire the marketing maggots and hire more programmers.
  • M$ and Intel will even supply you with Apple rumours for free.

    LOL! Very, very true. Let us not forget that a lot of the FUD that came out during the "death watch" days for Apple came straight from InHell.

    It's truly lovely to see AMD eat InHell's lunch with the Gigahertz war and all. ;-)

    --\\<-H--

  • Can you imagine the uproar if Microsoft used their advertising dollars to try and influence editorial content?

    I infer that you have never seen PC Magazine. 1995 award for Technical Excellence: Windows 95.


    ---
  • In the strive to get the latest news first, sometimes printing rumors helps... as long as they are labeled as such. What Apple is trying to do is control the news so they always are the ones with all the latest info (which negates the whole purpose of other Mac news site). I think this has alot to do with the pre-realease cube pictures, Jobs wanted the spot light all for himself. He couldn't stand sharing it even though the light was shining brighter.
  • Well, at least threatening to pull advertising (and the associated income) is better than threatening to sue the pants off 'em...

    --
  • Yeah, right. I worked in the print media, too. And I've watched technology publications whore themselves out to the highest bidder. The company I work for [cyberelves.com] was approached in the last few months by a supposedly reputable tech rag; the salesweasel flat out told the General Manager than editorial column inches on us were entirely dependant on buying an ad - the bigger the ad, the more column inches.

    The seperation is generally considered cleaner in more mainstream publications, but there are well-known [salon.com] examples of so-called respectable publishers selling themselves to the highest bidder.

  • And I'm not trolling here, I really want to know, is how can the apple user culture, which is traditionally viewed as the hipper (or hippier) side of computing associate itself with the anal retentive bunch of people who just don't get it that Apple has always been? And how can Apple so seriously not get the culture when they can put out a product that is acclaimed to be the most user friendly product in the computer market?

    It just doesn't make any sense, like a 6 foot wookie living on Endor.

  • Steve Jobs needs to renew his birth control pills. He's PMSing out of control. PMS : Powerful Moron Syndrome.

    "Apple Computer : Proudly going out of business for over 20 years"
  • "ZDNet is reporting that Microsoft's advertising
    agencing is threatening several publications
    carrying Microsoft ads to stop printing Microsoft
    rumours or else Microsoft will stop advertising
    with them. "

    MS made great (call it abusive) use of rumours.
    Why cant apple let the word flow ? I dont see
    a good reason to stop it, unless its diffamatory
    or with the purpose of harm.

    Everybody likes rumours. Its gossip, attention.
    its hype. Man, rumours (good ones) are free
    advertisement.

  • by jspectre ( 102549 ) on Friday September 15, 2000 @05:18AM (#777351) Journal
    i'm a die-hard apple fan, or at least i was. i go back to a 128 in 1984 and a //e in 1980. but i'll say this, apple sure is alienating their fans these days. jobs may have been good for pulling apple out of a rut, but he doesn't seem to have the ability to manage things as they flow along.

    since he's taken over he's managed to:
    kill the clones
    kill the newton
    bring back the closed, all-in-one, non-upgradable mac (iMac and Cube)
    throw NeXTOS on top of new hardware (sorry OSX is NeXT in mac's clothing)
    threaten to sue a few dozen web sites
    just about squash publication of a book that doesn't portray him as a god
    act like a spoiled brat when ATI let the cat out of the bag a little early (like we didn't know anyway?)
    Sell out Apple to Microsoft.
    Piss off game developers.
    Piss off 3rd parties with constant color switches.
    Failed to give the users/consumers many of the things they have asked for, 6 slot systems, voice recgonition, multi-button mice, etc.
    Turn Apple's once great, free support into clueless, expensive, too-long-on-hold waste of time (example: call up with a broken mouse and they insist you reinstall the OS. hello??? yes, this happened to me. their tech support are clueless and only know how to read a script)
    sue their own (ex)employees
    go from a happy-friendly image to one of a closed, grey corporate environment.. kinda like what they didn't want in their 1984 ad. hmm.. Is that jobs we now see on the big screen?

    What's up with this? I think someone needs to take Jobs over their knee and spank him a few times. Doesn't he know how to play nice with everyone else? Apple's market share sucks and by pissing off the only fans and users they have it's going to drop even more.
  • Do you think the iMac would have still would have received front page headlines if details and/or screenshots of it had leaked out three weeks prior to it's introduction?

    Um, i recieved an email, while on the Apple Mailing List about the iMac about 2 months before it came out. And I couldn't believe it didn't have a disk drive. They gave a lot of info about it out, and I'm sure I wasn't the only one on that list. rick.

  • Um, i recieved an email, while on the Apple Mailing List about the iMac about 2 months before it came out.

    The iMac was "introduced" aka "announced" aka "unveiled" at a media event in May 1998. It shipped in August. Apple wasn't in danger of cutting into sales because there was no comparable machine (consumer centric) in the product line at the time.

    - Scott

    ------
    Scott Stevenson
  • So Ford should stop advertising in Time because they are making Ford look bad?

    Pardon the pun, but you're talking apples and oranges.

    It's not that rumors make the Mac look bad. It's that rumors (a) kill current sales while everyone waits for "the next big thing" and (b) tells competitors what's coming up so they can pre-announce it.

    Not that I don't think this is a dumb policy, but there is a method to the madness.

    -jon

  • check out macfixit.. you'll see a long list of complains with the cubes.. sleep problems, shutdown problems, dvd problems, many units arriving DOA. not to mention the incompatability with monitors not having Apple's new ADC connector. I wouldn't buy one with your paycheck. If I want an all-in-one unit I'll buy an iMac. If I want a real g4 I'll buy a real g4 with expandability and options.

    guess you never tried aqua. you should have. inconsistencies in the interface, the dock, long list of complaints on this one too. the beta (which i'm running right now) isn't much better.
  • It's not like most of the rumor sites are "information for the people" champions. Many of them are for-profit businesses.

    Just want to point out, may of the rumor sites began as "information for the people" sites, and only added banner ads to help cover costs as they grew. Very comparable to Slashdot in that respect, which now is also a commercial enterprise.

    (not disagreeing with you, btw)

    --

  • The metallica of the computer industry...

    well, not exactly....

    ok, not at all...
  • A few thoughts:

    since he's taken over he's managed to:
    kill the clones
    kill the newton


    Development of HyperCard has also died; I'm not sure how much of that is Jobs' fault but he didn't help it any (Jobs never understood just what HyperCard was).

    bring back the closed, all-in-one, non-upgradable mac (iMac and Cube)

    Compare to this iPaq [compaq.com] from Compaq, or a NetVista [ibm.com] from IBM - why shouldn't Apple have a competing product? Nobody ever said you had to buy one.

    throw NeXTOS on top of new hardware (sorry OSX is NeXT in mac's clothing)

    Everyone I've talked to who's used NeXT systems absolutely loves them. Yes, Mac OS X is NeXTStep in Mac's clothing - what's wrong with that?

    threaten to sue a few dozen web sites

    They eventually figured it out, I think. They're suing their employees instead, so hopefully they'll leave the Web sites alone now.

    just about squash publication of a book that doesn't portray him as a god

    I think I missed that. What was the title of the book you're referring to, and what did Apple do?

    act like a spoiled brat when ATI let the cat out of the bag a little early (like we didn't know anyway?)

    Oh, and you're basing this information on rumor sites? In case you missed it, Apple just announced that they're offering the ATi Radeon as a BTO option on the Apple Store...

    Sell out Apple to Microsoft.

    What, you think Microsoft went into that willingly?!? Hell no. Apple forced them into it, to reassure the general public that Apple isn't dying. As part of the agreement, Microsoft paid Apple an undisclosed sum of cash (rumored to be around $400 million but I've heard other figures as well), invested $250 million in non-voting Apple stock, and publicly announced its support of Apple and the Mac platform, including committing to support Office and IE on the Mac OS.

    Piss off game developers.

    Which game developers are you referring to? John Carmack of id Software sounds ecstatic about Mac OS X (see my previous comment about NeXT users).

    I'm hungry, I'm gonna go find dinner now.

    --

  • Some of these complaints are valid, some are not.

    kill the clones
    Cloning was never set up properly. They should have had the clone makers go after markets that Apple didn't, instead they ended up cannibalizing Apple sales.

    kill the newton
    I agree, that sucked. The Newton would be awesome today if it had continued.

    bring back the closed, all-in-one, non-upgradable mac (iMac and Cube)
    They have Firewire, so you can add high-speed peripherals. With 100Mbps Ethernet built in, most people don't need PCI slots; if you do then get a G4 tower.

    throw NeXTOS on top of new hardware (sorry OSX is NeXT in mac's clothing)
    And that's bad why? The power and stability of Unix, a (mostly) great UI, what's the problem?

    threaten to sue a few dozen web sites
    just about squash publication of a book that doesn't portray him as a god act like a spoiled brat when ATI let the cat out of the bag a little early (like we didn't know anyway?)

    No arguments here, those are all pretty tacky.

    Sell out Apple to Microsoft.
    Um, no. If you're talking about Microsoft's stock investment, Apple at the time was on the verge of death. They needed a vote of confidence, and apparently also had solid evidence that Microsoft had stolen code from them. In a sort of mutual blackmail, Apple agreed to promote IE while Microsoft agreed to continue with MS Office and make a public show of support.

    Piss off game developers.
    How? They adopted OpenGL instead of their proprietary Quickdraw3D and Id and other developers have been generally pleased from what I've seen.

    Failed to give the users/consumers many of the things they have asked for, 6 slot systems, voice recgonition, multi-button mice, etc.
    Extremely few users need more than 3 slots, you can buy an expansion chassis if you do. Jobs has demoed IBM's ViaVoice lots of times; I wouldn't be surprised if it ends up integrated into OS X. I have mixed feelings about the mouse; I personally use an Intellimouse (MS should really stick to hardware), but I've heard plenty of anecdotal evidence that non-techies are easily confused with left and right clicking.

    Turn Apple's once great, free support into clueless, expensive, too-long-on-hold waste of time
    If true, that's obviously bad, and I've heard many other negative reports. On the other hand, I've had to call support exactly once in 5 years.

    I think someone needs to take Jobs over their knee and spank him a few times. Doesn't he know how to play nice with everyone else? Apple's market share sucks and by pissing off the only fans and users they have it's going to drop even more.
    Apple's market share is increasing, and their stock has soared in the last two years. I disagree with a lot of what Jobs has done, but he's obviously doing some things right. As an Apple shareholder, I'm glad he's there.

  • Well with all the stuff going on with Rambus, I think this is just Apple taking steps to make sure they retain the title of Most Litigation-Happy Company Ever.
    Look for things to heat up when Rambus starts suing everybody that uses DDR in anything. I think Apple's only choice will be to respond by suing anyone with a product name that start small i capital consonant.
  • bring back the closed, all-in-one, non-upgradable mac (iMac and Cube)
    They have Firewire, so you can add high-speed peripherals. With 100Mbps Ethernet built in, most people don't need PCI slots; if you do then get a G4 tower.

    So, im supposed to upgrade my graphics card by plugging it into my ethernet port? Or get a firewire soundcard? I'm having difficulty seeing how im supposed to fit a PCI card in such a manner.
    Extremely few users need more than 3 slots, you can buy an expansion chassis if you do

    I honestly dont know anyone who has less than 3 expansion cards fitted in their system, and those who do are planning to fit an extra one at some point.


    Nick
  • some of the things they are doing are really not good.

    I'd think they have to have a backlash sometime soon.

    Imagine a company that makes you GLAD that it's microsoft who has the monopoly.

    ________

  • ALL Apple is doing is deciding to not pay the people that are taking information on their unannounced products (some that may never even make it to market), and selling it in a magazine for personal gain.

    No, tha'ts not ALL they're doing. They are requesting, if you read the article, " a statement from each magazine's publisher or editorial department asserting that they do not participate in publishing rumors or speculation about Apple or Mac."

    Even one of our much maligned western governments wouldn't have the gall to request in writing that a newspaper commit to never publishing speculative articles.

    This doesn't strike you as coercive or extortive? You think we shouldn't criticize this sort of behavior? Its ok for corporations to demand editorial changes because they spend money advertising their products?

  • The G4 Cubes have been having trouble with their power - going to sleep randomly, shutting down, not quite starting up, that kind of thing. It's probably related to the new power switches (which are entirely electronic - no mechanical parts at all) on the screens and cubes, and some parts coming loose in shipping.

    Of course, I haven't had any particular problems with my NeXT cube, other than an overwhelming desire to buy a matching subwoofer ;)
  • by WinDoze ( 52234 )
    In order to stop the rumors, Apple will stop advertising? Great! That's a fantastic busniess plan!

  • by mholve ( 1101 )
    Ya dumb bastard.

    What's an "agencing?" Don't you mean "agency?"

    I got your bad karma right here.

  • I'm sure this will not go over well but...

    Mac was/is the OS for idiots.
    It was the great introductory OS and if you stuck with it you got good enough at the "voodoo" to get it to function the way you wanted it to

    Things that made this idiots OS great:

    - no CL...nothing underneath. If you wanted to 'troubleshoot' it was a matter of restarting and fiddling with intis. Archaic but it worked. (more or less)
    -The GUI was all. Nuthin' more, nuthin less.
    - It was an OS that the layman could understand. Logical, files, folders, hard drive on desktop, what ran the thing was in the system. You could pretty much put anything anywhere and it would work
    -blah, blah, blah...

    I think the switch to nix is gonna piss off a lot of people. They have no idea what they are getting into. And it is NEXT, its not a mac. All that is gone.

    I bought my mother a MAC. I sure as hell wouldn't install Linux on her machine. I could see explaining about kernels to her.Right! But I can deal with telling her 'you see that smiley faced guy that says system'. And that's just the beginning. Lets not forget that a ton of technologies that Apple didn't abandon in the 90's and almost all of the mac users have gotten used to will be gone.
    I think Steve screwed the pooch and this may just well be the real beginning of the end for apple.
  • The small sites are the easiest to break. Apple aren't going to go after the big boys, who might hit back even harder than Apple can.

  • That's not bad karma. Bad karma is when you get moderated up despite a Goatse.cx [goatse.cx] link.
  • Doesn't this mean either ways rumours sites are going to be stuffed.

    Scenario #1.
    Don't publish rumours - no interesting articles - only boring reviews - no people hitting the page - no ad revenue.

    Scenario #2.
    Publish rumours - people come - lots of page hits - no ads - no money to support - might as well be dead

    I hope this isn't a rumour itself ...
  • I Think to the all the mac papers who live essentialy on rumors, previews, new stuff and mac publicity. If they put only previews and new stuff they can fill 95% of the paper with publicity.On the other hand, if they put rumors, they can put a lot of interrestings articles and drop all the publicity crap. My heart is in balance between these 2 extremes :-)
  • Although I don't like all of his tactics, I wouldn't be typing this on a Mac if Jobs hadn't been using them.

    Whereas I won't be typing on a Mac because Apple chose to employ them. I was lining up a Mac laptop for my next work PC, but I don't think I'll bother...

  • Rumors, leaks, and etc. should not be classified as a 'security problem'. When they really are free-advertising.

    Everyone who goes to a rumor site KNOWS that it's a rumor, and that whatever is there might never make it to production. The thing to realize is that it's 'inside information' that really peaks people's interest. It's what keeps people excited about the product/product line...

    The auto companies have had 'concept vehicles' at auto shows forever because people like to see what could be coming down the road... Daimler-Chrysler took that idea, and brought it to production, and the results the hottest things around: Viper, Prowler, and etc.

    When will these people learn to USE the tools rather than try to squash them?
  • If a RedHat employee starts telling people to buy Microsoft software and to support the mentality, what do /.ers say? It's one bad employee and really has nothing to do with RedHat.

    Apply the logic here. The advertising agency, an Apple employee (*not* Apple), does not want its copyrighted work to appear on websites which focus on Apple products that don't exist. It's one bad employee and has nothing to do with Apple.

    Now, go put away your tar and the feathers.
    --Jeff
  • Don't display apple ads.

    You can generate more revenue by publishing Apple rumours and displaying M$ and Intel ads.

    M$ and Intel will even supply you with Apple rumours for free.

  • Yeah. THe that is THEIR RIGHT. Nobody can force them to advertise with the magazine.

    Should a magazine buckle to the whims of it's advertisers, the public picks up on it, and it's popularity decreases. A great many trade journals are like this.

    Like the copies of 'server/workstation Expert' I get in the mail for some reason. It's industry-funded tripe.

  • >If the marketing department has this as a policy

    It isn't the marketing department, it is the advertising agency (Chiat Day, I believe). If the marketing department were at fault, I would have a different reaction.

    --Jeff
  • This is very intriguing, I will learn something today. Here's the definition of 'grace' from Webster's

    Main Entry: 1grace Pronunciation: 'grAs Function: noun Etymology: Middle English, from Old French, from Latin gratia favor, charm, thanks, from gratus pleasing, grateful; akin to Sanskrit grnAti he praises Date: 12th century 1 a : unmerited divine assistance given humans for their regeneration or sanctification b : a virtue coming from God c : a state of sanctification enjoyed through divine grace

    I think Slashdot system kinda mixes both. Your karma stay with you until you create a new login in which case you have a clean slate again!

    The 'classical' karma theory is more aligned with Objectivism.

    Neologism reminds of many instances within present day Indian culture. One funny one being the word 'Yankee'. Until I came to USA I didn't realise it actually meant to address a people. Back in India the punjabi town/village simpletons address this term to complement someone's dressing style as in "Today you are looking very Yankee". This term came into popular use after the ice cream chain - Yankee Doodle.
  • We're talking about journalism, and you're quoting Salon???

    I'm not quite sure what your point is, in terms of relevance to the issue at hand...

  • You forgot:

    SAVE THE COMPANY FROM DEATH.

    When Steve returned, Apple was 3 weeks away from Chapter 11 (nobody knew how bad things really were). He rescued the company from certain death. Sometimes when you do CPR, you break a few ribs. Better to be alive and have a few broken ribs, no?
  • I'm beginning to hedge my bet that Apple will turn out to be worse than Microsoft. They already charge far more for basic components and a "squirt of color" than most normal computer manufacturers. Quicktime 4 is buggy, unstable and clashes with the basic guidelines of the GUI. Now Apple is filing suit against "John Does" and threatening against printing rumors. Enough is enough.
  • If I'm reading a rumors site, I want to know that they're independent of Apple [apple.com] and other major players in the Mac market: IBM, Motorola, M$, Adobe, etc. Therefore, I will drop them from my bookmarks and link pages [earthlink.net] if they accept advertising from same. I'm also deeply suspicious of publications that sign NDAs.

    I see this problem all over the product journalism field, whether it be computers, cars, stereo gear, or movie reviewing quote whores. Big advertisers have power to influence content, and it's hard to put together a publication without their sponsorship. The solution is that we consumers have to demand independence.

  • And i'll say it again. Apple's historical behavior is far worse than Microsoft ever dreamed of being. The only reason no one cares about Apple's shinanigans is that they have been so incompetent at become a monopoly.

    Can you imagine the uproar if Microsoft used their advertising dollars to try and influence editorial content?

    I detest Apple-the-company, but ironically I'm excited about Apple's products for the first time since, well, 1984 (the release of the Mac). The Open Source community really, really needs to take what is good about OS/X (such as the XML-based configurations, perhaps the rendering system) and get the good ideas. Otherwise I may be tempted to someday get a Unix-based Mac. I really want a Unix-based desktop system that has a reasonable set of business applications, but not at that price (figuratively and literally).


    --

  • Maybe Jobs has realized where the real money is at: rumors. Think about it, MacOS Rumors, Slashdot, ZDNet--all non-fact-based journalism sites, all with high-traffic. Just like they killed off the clone makers a few years ago, they are killing off the rumor-clone makers now. Then they'll launch the iRumor.
    --
    Linux MAPI Server!
    http://www.openone.com/software/MailOne/
  • A while back, Sun Microsystems [sun.com] went after the well-known and loved site sunhelp.org [sunhelp.org] because if it's own rumor page. The guy running the site had to eventually remove the rumors in a deal with Sun.

    Oddly, I contributed that story, but no one ever mentioned it on Slashdot.

  • Without rumors, Apple still does have some news to report...such as the news that all corporations like to report:

    The corporations commitment to shaping the future.

    The corporations commitment to building partnerships.

    The corporations commitment to building a strong workforce that includes women and minorities.

    The corporations commitment to forging alliances between the public and private sector to shape the future.

    The corporations commitment to protecting the environment while returning their investors investment.

    The corporations commitment to spending the money they aren't using to build a strong workforce or protecting the environment to pay PR firms to churn out glossy bullshit that they must have started reading themselves if they think they can get people to pay attention to it instead of actual, substantial news from independent sources.

  • There's a long tradition of advertisers trying to influence the editorial side of publications, so this is nothing new. I just hope that the publications in question resist the pressure and that Apple (assuming that TBWA/Chiat/Day's [chiatday.com] threat is at their behest) back off of this immediately. I can understand Apple seeking to enforce NDAs, but not their intruding on the freedom of the press.



    --meredith
  • Whereas I won't be typing on a Mac because Apple chose to employ them. I was lining up a Mac laptop for my next work PC, but I don't think I'll bother...

    so it'll be an puter running an *intel* chip with a *microsoft* os?

    way to take the moral highground there

    ---

  • Rumors are the lifeblood of consumer originated hype! Leaks or not, they draw interest in the product. Waiting for Lord Steve to bless us with the Royal version of things takes too long.

    I'll start a rumor: The people behind this consort with fly larvae! (Sorry if I cost /. a couple ad bux)

    Vote [dragonswest.com] Naked 2000
  • Just look at any Ziff Davis magazine, and it becomes obvious that the advertisement affects the stories covered. Remember back in the early 90's when you could read magazines and get useful reviews of upcoming hardware and software?

    Now all you can read are praising reviews of so-so products (if they're big advertisers) or so-so reviews of really crappy products (if they're big advertisers) or scathing reviews from so-so products (if they're not advertisers).

    Now you have to resort to other sources to get a less biased, and informative view. (Anandtech, Tomshardware, are web examples)

    The bigger the media is, the worse it gets. What's really scary is who actually owns the large TV-stations... and watching politics dictate what is 'deemed' important enough to show on the news.

    Rader

  • Any place that has a shred of journalistic integrity should immediately tell Apple four words: "First", "Amendment", "Fuck", "Off".

    Jobs is a known control freak, but it's time for him to realize that his control over real world is limited. The sooner he understands this, the better it will be for everybody.

    Kaa
  • Half of the things you complain about are good.

    The cube is great. Silent, powerful linuxppc machine.

    iMac almost certainly saved Apple.

    Newton was good, but would never have been a commercial success at the price they asked.

    Sell out Apple to Microsoft? Hardly. Secure the future of development of the world's most popular application software while gaining needed investment $$$.

    And you didn't mention, but I will - the new keyboard shipping with the G4s is one of the best I have ever used, and is just as happy on a PC editing visual studio as it is under MacOS or linuxppc.

    I could go on... arguments involving Macs are never worthwhile.
  • Apple's advertising agency is threatening several publications carrying Apple ads to stop printing Apple rumours

    Perhaps I misunderstood. I took "publications" to mean ANY media outlet that printed rumors, such as MacWeek (does that magazine still exist?), etc. So if John C. Dvorak prints an Apple rumor in his "Inside Track" column in PC Magazine (what a terrible magazine that is, but that's a whole different issue), Apple would then refuse to run ads in PC Magazine (yup, I have occasionally seen Apple ads in that rag).

  • Wow, that is one of the most
    out of date postings I've
    ever seen on /.

    Apple has been making money
    since 1998. There were several
    quarters where they lost
    a lot of money... but that
    was stopped 2 YEARS ago. For
    2 YEARS they have been consistantly
    making a proft _and_ that profit
    has been increasing.

    If you are going to take pot shot at
    a company at least get your facts straight.
    ---
    RobK
  • Does it make me evil if I buy Cheerios instead of Cocoa Puffs?
  • I'm seriously considering switching from the mac (which i've been on since i've been 10 years old) to an ibm w/ GNU|Linux. they're actually trying to censor the damned press now to keep their relatively unimportant and predictable secrets safe. Rumors are usually just educated guesses which the readers can come up with on their own anyway.
  • by mindstrm ( 20013 ) on Friday September 15, 2000 @05:31AM (#777400)
    Folks,we might think it's silly.. but this is not 'evil'.

    Apple isn't threatening to sue; Apple isn't threatening to abuse the courts to kill 'the little guy'. Apple is saying 'We don't agree with your putting up rumors, so we've decided that unless you stop doing it, we cannot advertise with you anymore'. This is called VOTING WITH YOUR MONEY.

    Why should apple advertise with someone who is doing something they don't agree with? For the same reason you should buy music from a band you don't agree with?
  • However, telling a publication not to print certain materials is much more common. Especially if those materials related to you.

    For instance, many major magazines that are supposedly run the way you describe flat-out refuse to put AdBuster's Parody ads in, even though AdBuster's will pay FULL price, because they don't want to piss off their 'big' advertisers.

    And man, that's capitalism at it's best.
  • They don't read the sites, Steve. Your secrets are safe.

    It's not the fans that Steve Jobs doesn't want to know what Apple is doing. It's the competitors who, if they would find out what Apple is planning, would announce that you should what 3 more years because MS^H^H, er the competition, is going to be releasing the exact same thing, but better.

    I'm sure that if Steve Jobs had a way of letting the fans know about developments without the "competitors" being able to make claims that would cause non-fans to not buy Apples products, he'd do that. But I think for know, if you really want Apple to be successful for you, you need to support Apple and work with them.

    -Brent

  • Ahem....you forgot....

    Axe the only UK AppleExpo in favour of *another* US show.

    Axe all international OS variations in favour of one (US) version.

    Start using the consumer to beta test it's hardware ~ anyone got a Cube? What a peice of shit! Out of the ten I got, 2 were DOA (one had a dead DVD drive, the other had the sleep/restart/shut down problem [macfixit.com]) another two have got a VGA problem where the only resolution you can select is 640x480! Nice!

    What gives Jobs? I forsee the Cube as being one of Apple's biggest farces yet.....watch this space!

    --------------------------------------------

  • just a thought
  • But don't kid yourself that it's not "evil" to use advertising dollars to influence editorial content.

    Nonsense. I do not know your political views, so I cannot give a more concrete example, but do you buy products from companies which support causes you disagree with? It's not evil to refrain from support someone with whom one disagrees; it's intelligent. It's called taking one's business elsewhere, much as we do with Linux. It may not be the greatest desktop OS, but It's Not Windows.

    Voting with one's dollars is an intelligent and a useful thing. Why should a company be forced to support a competitor (in this case, a competitor in the surprising-news market)? Apple have no duty to support any web site at all.

  • "News is what someone doesn't want printed. All else is publicity.

    No paid-subscription magazine should go for this. Cancel your subcription to any magazine that does. They're not a magazine any more; they're an advertising mailer.

  • This is a case that Apple couldn't win

    But you're forgetting the Second Golden Rule. Just so you remember:

    1. Act toward others as you'd have them act toward you.
    2. He who has the gold makes the rules.
    Technology lawsuits are not won by right but by might. Whoever can buy the best champion (lawyers) will almost invariably win.
    <O
    ( \
    XGNOME vs. KDE: the game! [8m.com]
  • by mindstrm ( 20013 ) on Friday September 15, 2000 @05:37AM (#777418)
    For the same reason Apple is not 'forced' to pay these people to put up advertising.

    If the Site values editorial content over the money Apple pays it for ads, then they won't buckle. If they DO need apple that badly as a client, then they'll buckle (and so they should if their livleyhood depends on apple)
  • However, people have a natural right to 'discuss' things that 'might' happen. If I think apple is going to do somethign neat, I can talk about it all I like, and Apple shouldn't have a problem with it.

    Of course, where Apple spends it's advertising money is completely up to apple.
  • While working as advertising manager for a college newspaper, I received a phone call from the office of Stan Durwood, who built AMC Theatres into the dominant entertainment force it is now. He was calling to tell me that because of an article we ran which was analyzing AMC's questionable funding of our university's sports endeavors, he would pull all advertising from our paper. Here was a classic case of top-down-authority scolding bottom-up-authority, and here was the result:

    1. We lost a little advertising, a small dent in the tens of thousands that came in from elsewhere.

    2. The editors promptly knew that we were onto a real story, for once, and pursued it further.

    3. AMC have the rest of my life to put up with me telling this story when it becomes relevant.

    4. It polarized the entire newspaper, having the exact opposite effect they sought, which was a threat to silence us.

    5. Shooting themselves in the foot, AMC lost what they were seeking when they sought our audience for advertisement in the first place.

    Pondering what they were doing, I knew that in order for this conflict of interest/ethical breach to come at us from AMC, the whole company had to be pretty entrenched in it. Things like this are not the whims of a single Napoleonic complex--they are cultivated over time in a corporate "We're the most powerful thing on earth" environment. Fortunately, newspapers don't have that luxury, and take the brunt of this kind of pressure: Newspapers rely on reputation and credibility more than any corporation, and know it. Money is secondary to a decent editor, principles being first. Media cannot buckle to conflicts of interest which might seem commonplace to their advertisers, or they will dwindle into fluffy bundles of advertising. The better writers will move elsewhere, because they gots egos as big as China. I am sure AMC applied the same pressure to other advertising outlets, like the big city newspaper. Happens all the time, but the best newspapers (or websites) laugh at it. -Water Paradox

  • Recently, there was an attempt to rip me a new one here when I implied it was a good thing AIM may be forced to open up. The argument was that it was a proprietary database, so why should others be granted access blablabla.. Isn't this somewhat similar? Shouldn't Apple be able to defend proprietary information and prevent it from being released until they chose? Isn't that their RIGHT? The premature release of this data takes the edge off their advertising campaigns and "hurts" their market strategy. I know there is a difference between a database, that could be considered an asset, and rumors/leaked advertising data, but they both have a dollar value that can be attached. Let the flame begin.

  • Umm Apple isn't threatening them with some sort of legal violation, they're simply going to yank the advertising dollars out from under the site's feet. If Apple doesn't agree with sites posting rumors, they're well within their rights to yank their support of these sites. No first amendmen violation whatsoever. This is not to say that I agree with these types of tactics, I'm just saying it's not a first amendment issue, it's a money issue.


    ----
    Dave
    MicrosoftME®? No, Microsoft YOU, buddy! - my boss
  • Microsoft *DOES* use advertizing dollars to influence editoral content. Remember close to the end of the first round of DoJ vs MS? Several 'letters' appears from various ppl in major papers and trade journals that defended Microsoft, but it was found out later that MS basically paid people to write these, some even were ghost written.

  • I worked in the print media before. The #1 rule there was that the advertising department does NOT talk to the editorial department at all.

    You can't promise to do a full page story on Mom's diner if they promise to buy an ad every week for the next month. It just can't work that way.

    Hopefully these publications do business the same way.

    ________

  • Can you imagine the uproar if Microsoft used their advertising dollars to try and influence editorial content?

    I infer that you have never seen PC Magazine. 1995 award for Technical Excellence: Windows 95.
    Yeah, Ziff-Davis used to be Microsoft's best lapdog, which is why I'm finding it so ironic to see ZDNet editorial staffers chiming in (in Talkback to the ZDNet article) about the separation between advertising and editorial content. It's nice that they've gotten religion, but it's sitll amusing.
  • The problem was, it was "developers writing programs to run on next". Unfortunately, much like web banners that merely advertise other sites of banners, they could only sell to other next developers, because noone else bought them . . .

    hawk
  • > I'm sure this will not go over well but...

    For the same reason that "the sky is green" doesn't go over well . . .

    >- no CL...nothing underneath. If you wanted to 'troubleshoot' it was a
    > matter of restarting and fiddling with intis

    wrong on both counts. If you wanted such trouble shooting, there were debuggers with *gasp* CLI's. Playing with inits and rebooting was only to deal with *surprise* problems with inits..

    > -The GUI was all. Nuthin' more, nuthin less.

    try saying "hypercard". It did things that *still* aren't available on other platforms. The closest I can come to doing some of the useful things I used to do require lisp or a derivative, and still lack the ability to trivially modify the interface (lisp doesn't do it as well; it's just the only way I"ve found that's possible).

    but then again, why am I bothering to respond to pure ignorance???

    hawk
  • is to insure that apple will not get advertising in the serious press, but only the rah-rah rags. *That's* why it's a bad move for apple.
  • We're talking about journalism, and you're quoting Salon???

    A Salon citation to back something as "well known" for some reason makes me recall Pravda bits that began with, "it is will known that . . ." before something such as the soviet invention of the automobile, or that the U.S. bombs canadian babies, or . . .

    I'd acknowledge that Salon is a half a step above the National Enquirer, but I wouldn't want to have to defend that position . . . :)

    [It's editors response to something along the lines of, "your sole source was someone you know to be a pathological liar and has already admitted lying about this" was approximately, "it's ok because republicans are evil."
  • Honestly.

    Why does 'prime time' exist, and why is it harder/racier than afternoon/morning shows?
    Why are 'soaps' so hard?

    Because advertisers say so. They say to a network, "this is who I think is watching at this time, and so I am willing to pay X to advertise", or "I do not want my product associated with Y, as I think these other people are watching, who wouldn't approve"

    This doesn't make Apple evil (there are other things that make Apple evil ...), just stupid. 'Normal' consumers don't read rumor sites, and don't care if they are inacurate, and so rumor inacuraces do not affect Apple's sales. 'Early Adopters' (read: Screaming Tech Monkeys) do read rumor sites, but do so with large amounts of salt, and know that their will be inaccuracies.

    It's just bad PR on Apple's part, and probably wouldn't have happened if the Evangelist was still arround. (You know, the Apple run list that spread Apple rumors) Even so, it only annoys people who read apple rumor sites, who are apparently not a large enough part of the market for Apple to care about.

    Translation: Now that they are popular, they're ditching their geeky date to the prom, to go with the football player.

    -- Crutcher --
    #include <disclaimer.h>
  • - See new article
    - Quickly hit "reply"
    - "First Post" OR "Hot Grits" OR "Natalie Portman"
    - Read article
    - Reword article, post revisions
    - Watch karma roll in
    - Wait until 15 posts are at +2 or more
    - "Did anyone actually read the article?"
    - Reword article, post revisions
    - Hit reply
    - "I'm probably going to get moderated down for this..."
    - Reword article, post revisions
  • Why should apple advertise with someone who is doing something they don't agree with?

    So Ford should stop advertising in Time because they are making Ford look bad?

    Yes, they have a perfect right to put their advertising dollars where they see fit. But don't kid yourself that it's not "evil" to use advertising dollars to influence editorial content.


    --

  • I'm sorry, but half the fun of being a geek is getting to speculate about what the next best thing is going to be...

    Apple is shooting itself in the foot by not allowing rumors to spread... everybody knows to take these things with a grain of salt, but they still allow you to get excited about the product.

    Doug
  • Yes this is bad Karma. They place an ad with a rumor site presumably because they are getting traffic consisting of people interested in the apple platform and probably either existing customers or people who are looking to buy a mac soon. So what drew that crowd into that website in the first place? NEWS ABOUT APPLE and RUMORS. Now if they took off their apple rumors then the traffic dissapears and Apple would not want to advertise there and neither would anyone else either.

    I guess it's clear then, keep publishing rumors. It is a classic loose loose situation. You loose the rumors and you loose apple as an advertiser evenually as your traffic dissapears. You keep publishing rumors and you loose apple as an advertiser right away.

    Now what about editorial content. Will apple stop advertising in newspapers or magazines because they publish bad reviews of an apple product? How far could this go?

  • by omarius ( 52253 ) <omar&allwrong,com> on Friday September 15, 2000 @05:13AM (#777470) Homepage Journal
    • Whine.
    • Take Ball
    • Go home
    • Repeat

    They should be happy to get the fsking publicity.

    -Omar

  • The #1 rule there was that the advertising department does NOT talk to the editorial department at all.

    This practice is certainly not followed universally.

    It is standard practice for small newspapers to sell advertising packages that include guaranteed editorial coverage.

    Larger publications also bend this rule a little bit; it's called custom publishing. If an advertiser wants a special issue of a magazine produced, the can enter an arrangement with the publisher where they supply all of the advertising content and the editorial content is tailored to their needs. Publications who care about advertising influence end up being really careful in this situation to ensure that there is a divide between the editorial and advertising staffs.

    In the network television work, the barriers between the editorial and business sides are flagrantly broken. Look at the CBS News coverage of survivor or ABC News coverage of Disney properties.

    In an editorial [zdnet.com], MacWeek discussed their reasoning in dropping Mac the Knife, MacWeek's rumor column. While the column listed several reasons for dropping the column, I believe that Mac the Knife's on advertising certainly had an affect.

    Some magazines, such as Ms. and Consumer Reporter, will not accept advertising so that there is never a link between editorial content and advertising.

    Finally, even where there is an explicit rule against advertising affecting the editorial side, the fact is that for most publications, if the editorial content angers the advertisers too much the editorial staff will be changed. In addition, advertising generally pays the editorial staff's salaries. The editorial staff knows this.

  • by TheInternet ( 35082 ) on Friday September 15, 2000 @10:21AM (#777478) Homepage Journal
    What's the harm of someone getting excited over a rumored product-to-be?

    Plenty.

    You have to realize that Apple market is much different than than of Dell's or VA's. The surprise factor is a significant catalyst. Do you think the iMac would have still would have received front page headlines if details and/or screenshots of it had leaked out three weeks prior to it's introduction? What about the announcement of the Microsoft investment?

    Additionally, as several other people have pointed out, there's the "wait and see" problem. If user a is about to buy a powerbook, but sees that new models are coming out in three months, he may wait. Of course, the new models may actually come out in six months. The rumor sites don't really know. But in the meantime, Apple has lost sales.

    It's not like most of the rumor sites are "information for the people" champions. Many of them are for-profit businesses.

    - Scott


    ------
    Scott Stevenson
  • Rumour sites are what get the hype going, people salivating, and the media interested and pumped.

    No, that's what the media events are for.

    Steve Jobs is a control freak who while being good at getting people focused and directed, has proven time and again to be bad for the long term interests of the company.

    You're kidding, right? Apple has pretty much only done well (mindshare, interest, profits, innovative products) while Jobs has been in charge. Had Jobs not been there, Jonathan Ives (head of industrial design) probably would have left, and Apple would still be chasing an OS strategy that would force all developers to rewrite their software from scratch.

    - Scott

    ------
    Scott Stevenson
  • by flatpack ( 212454 ) on Friday September 15, 2000 @05:13AM (#777489)

    I'm not condoning Apple's actions over this, they've been heavy-handed and way too zealous in what basically amounts to a "getting your own back" campaign against sites whose job is to report this kind of stuff.

    But still, you can see where they're coming from in wanting to keep information to themselves. There have been several cases in computing history where plans have changed, and a vast circulation of rumours means that the company can end up looking bad for not having done something they'd never wanted to announce.

    And when you get rumours flying around, as the net is so good for doing, it becomes next to impossible to separate the true ones from the false ones, and again this can make the company look bad, especially if the rumours are malicious. These rumours are a great way of influencing things like stock prices, and the net has already shown us that a mere rumour spread online can cause stocks to plummit or climb. What company is really going to want to the at the whim of that?

    But still, Apple really needs to stop being so vindictive about this. All they're doing is making themselves look like tyrants, a problem they've had in the past. If they relaxed a little, I'm sure things wouldn't be so bad - every time Apple blows up, it draws attention to the rumours...

  • Bad Karma, and a big mistake. The rumors sites are some of Apple's best advertising.

    I am not the Apple fan that I once was, but a few years ago, when everyone was still saying "Won't be long now before Apple dies," I was hearing other tunes from.... the rumors sites. They're some of the biggest supporters. They print the good news that everyone wants to beleive. They provide hints of things to come, soon, enticing fans to imagine and beleive in and most of all _eagerly anticipate_ them. Pop stars and politicians could take publicity lessons from the Apple Rumor Press.

    And the rest of the people, who Steve Jobs wants to "Wow" and "Surprise"? The untamed masses who are just getting a computer? They don't read the sites, Steve. Your secrets are safe. The fans visit the rumor mills; most people don't. The fans will check your cool stuff anyway. The average consumer will be intruiged with your suprises. It's OK. Leave the rumor sites alone. Heck, use them like politicians use the press... leak info selectively. But don't sue them. Good grief.

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