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Amazon Turns Off In-App Purchases In iOS Comixology 244

whisper_jeff writes: "Under the bold assumption that, since they were able to do it with books, they must be able to do it with comics, Amazon has decided to avoid Apple's 30% cut of in app purchases by removing the option from digital comic book platform Comixology for iOS users. It will be interesting to see if digital comic readers leap through the extra hoops to read digital comics on their iOS device or if Amazon has just signed the death knell for their new purchase. Readers may decide that buying a book and buying a comic aren't the same thing — that the extra hoops they're being forced to leap through simply aren't worth it for a comic that takes five minutes to read."
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Amazon Turns Off In-App Purchases In iOS Comixology

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  • Honestly, one of the great things about comixology was being able to quickly buy/download the next comic in the series when I was binge-reading. I have *hundreds* of comics through them, but I'm not sure if I will be buying any more with this new system. The kindle thing was enough of a pain, but at least a book takes a little longer to read.

    I think they've shot themselves in teh foot on this one.

    • by schnell ( 163007 )

      I have *hundreds* of comics through them, but I'm not sure if I will be buying any more with this new system.

      Agreed. I have bought hundreds of comics through this app, usually when they are on-sale and/or I'm reading one comic and get hooked and can just use the app to grab the rest of the series or storyline. In-app purchase was key since shopping through the Comixology website was simply not very convenient.

      I completely get why Amazon would want to stick it to Apple with a move like this. What I find to be un-Amazon-like is that they are screwing over their customer experience in order to do it. Say what you wil

      • by Richy_T ( 111409 ) on Sunday April 27, 2014 @01:08AM (#46851539) Homepage

        It's not just taking a poke at apple. Apples fees are egregiously high. Smaller operators may just be forced to suck it up but Amazon is in the position of making a more tactical decision. Not only do they have their own device(s) but Apple is not exactly without other competitors. I guess they feel they're in a position where they can see how it plays out.

        • More to the point, Amazon have a business plan that means they aim to make no profit, instead they reinvest or subsidise loss making lines with profitable ones, so they can kill other on-line markets and grow towards monopoly on-line market for everything.

          They won't care if comixology is unprofitable for years. For them it's better than letting another on-line market take a cut.

    • by Dahamma ( 304068 )

      So, you love the service but not enough just to go to a web site and buy it for 30% (or so) less than you have been paying now?

      I can't wait to see more companies rebelling against Apple's ridiculous (and in the case of music, borderline anti-trust) tax on all in-app purchases. The fact is they have priced everyone else but themselves out of the content market on iOS devices since the margin on a lot of content is less than the 30% they take...

      • by wonkey_monkey ( 2592601 ) on Sunday April 27, 2014 @03:09AM (#46851755) Homepage

        So, you love the service but not enough just to go to a web site and buy it for 30% (or so) less than you have been paying now?

        That's a rather optimistic assumption.

        • I believe the idea here is that comics would cost more when purchasing them on the iOS version due to them having to pay Apple. I read my comics on Android, so I have no clue if there is a price difference. I imagine their 99 cent deals are likely still priced at 99 cents, so I would expect to find that the comics cost exactly the same price on both platforms. Honestly I can see why Amazon would want to change this immediately. Comixology had no ground to oppose Apples charges, but Amazon has the cash to fr
    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot&worf,net> on Sunday April 27, 2014 @01:50AM (#46851633)

      Honestly, one of the great things about comixology was being able to quickly buy/download the next comic in the series when I was binge-reading. I have *hundreds* of comics through them, but I'm not sure if I will be buying any more with this new system. The kindle thing was enough of a pain, but at least a book takes a little longer to read.

      I think they've shot themselves in teh foot on this one.

      And you know what? Comixology knew that, that's why they sucked it up and gave Apple the 30% (though to be honest, the wholesale price Comixology paid meant they still made a profit - even raw comic books that sell for $4 probably cost the store $2 or less). Because by making the user jump through hoops to buy it to get that extra 30% means they'll lose the impulse-buy. And impulse-buy is big - for every person willing to jump through a hoop, 10-20 would just do one-click purchasing (just ask Amazon - if One-Click didn't work, why bother suing B&N over it?), making that 30% easily justifiable.

      And no, Amazon won't sell it online any cheaper - they can't. Diamond Comics (the SOLE comic distributor for practically ALL comics worldwide) has a virtual monopoly on it, and they view any reseller that undercuts others (comic stores) very dimly. The only time it doesn't matter is when the items are available through other channels (e.g., most books). But comics are Diamond's property and someone who undercuts may find their orders shorted, especially on items that are often allocated.

      • And no, Amazon won't sell it online any cheaper - they can't. Diamond Comics (the SOLE comic distributor for practically ALL comics worldwide) has a virtual monopoly on it, ...

        Uh, make that "worldwide distribution of all american comics".
        I have half a wall full of comic books (many of them actual books, with hard spines),
        and I'm not sure if even a single one of them is from a publisher under Diamond's
        "jurisdiction".

    • I am not a heavy comic reader, but I always went to the Comixology site to buy rather than the in app purchase. I figured that Comixology deserved the full price, and not the 30% skim that Apple took.
      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        I am not a heavy comic reader, but I always went to the Comixology site to buy rather than the in app purchase. I figured that Comixology deserved the full price, and not the 30% skim that Apple took.

        Perhaps, perhaps not. It's a seldom known fact that the cost of sales varies pretty dramataically.

        It's possible (and for many companies, entirely probable) that it's cheaper to pay Apple 30% than to duplicate Apple's efforts. In fact, many are extremely happy that stores are only charging 30% and it saves them

  • by postmortem ( 906676 ) on Saturday April 26, 2014 @10:52PM (#46851159) Journal

    If you're mafia, or Apple.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday April 26, 2014 @11:06PM (#46851221)

      Anything that keeps down Apple's extortion, even a bit, is a win in my book. And you can tell that Amazon is doing this _explicitly_ to keep the unearned profits out of Apple's pockets rather than to optimize their own revenue. If all they were concerned about was their bottom line they would offer the in-app purchases at an additional mark-up that covers Apple's 30% and let any customers who value that convenience over the extra cost have at it, while still offering external purchases at current prices. Amazon is by no means a saint either, but a little healthy sibling rivalry and competition can often (though not always) benefit consumers in the long run.

      • To me that's like cheering for Hitler against Staline, or vice versa.
        Apple at least is a company that sells only to high income snobs (and some working class people in the Earth's richest countries). Amazon's motto is to take over everything and destroy retail businesses while setting back the workplace by over 100 years.

        • Amazon is worse? (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          That's a VAST oversimplification with a huge "axe to grind against Amazon" and/or "fanboyism of Apple" slant at best.
          Not to mention the whole "setting the workplace back 100 years" is 100% pure BS.
          You're forgetting Wal-Mart already existed long before Amazon even made any significant inroads into anything beyond selling physical books online at good prices and with an unmatched selection and good, though impersonal, service.
          I happen to LIKE seeing companies like Amazon help keep things in check to some degr

      • by rabtech ( 223758 )

        Apple handles the billing, customer service, credit card merchant fees, runs gift card programs, provides a CDN to deliver both the app and downloadable content, and provides access to a captive market.

        Paypal or merchant account require you to handle the charging, refunds, paperwork, etc. You also need to find your own addressable market. And run your own gift cards if you want bank-less people or kids to be able to purchase. And setup your own CDN. Depending on the situation you may need to pay commissions

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Or Google. https://support.google.com/goo... [google.com]

      And virtually everyone else that offers payment processing services

      Sorry - you were attempting to imply that Apple was akin to the Mafia because they charge the same rate as everyone else for the same service. As you were.

      • by Gavagai80 ( 1275204 ) on Saturday April 26, 2014 @11:43PM (#46851341) Homepage

        And virtually everyone else that offers payment processing services

        Only in mobile app walled gardens. PayPal, 2checkout, authorize.net etc only take about 3%.

        • And virtually everyone else that offers payment processing services

          Only in mobile app walled gardens. PayPal, 2checkout, authorize.net etc only take about 3%.

          Bandwidth is cheap, so it's not a total excuse, but PayPal doesn't actually fulfill the entire transaction, just the payment. Apple hosts IAP content.

    • If you're mafia, or Apple.

      Or Amazon in this case.

      What, you think they're passing 100% of the profits to the comic book publisher? Hah!

      I'd bet they're going to take the 30% that Apple used to take, and stuff it right back in their own pockets, right along with any other existing fees.

  • To just let people buy it in store but make it 10% cheaper if bought directly on Amazon? People would instantly feel very smart if they jumped the hoops because it's CHEAPER and they're SAVING.

    • by whisper_jeff ( 680366 ) on Saturday April 26, 2014 @11:22PM (#46851297)

      Not allowed. If an in app purchase is offered and the same purchase is available on an external source, the price of the in app purchase cannot be higher.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

        Maybe they should start releasing "iOS edition" comics. Maybe throw the word "retina" in there too, just to make out there is some resolution difference.

  • Just make the mobile web site work well, and it's hardly jumping through hoops. Someone mentioned how easy it used to be to buy the next issue in-app. Just make is so when you go on the web site, the next issue is right there waiting for you to buy it (the app can report back which issues you've finished). It would add all of 15 seconds to the purchase process.

    I understand there's still a hoop there, but they don't have to be holding it very far off the ground, and it's certainly not on fire. They could

    • by HJED ( 1304957 )
      Considering that's what Amazon does with their kindle app (if you read a series the next book will usually be in the recommendations section on the Amazon home page), it wouldn't surprise me if they did that.
      • Agreed. I wasn't trying to imply that making a mobile site work that way was hard. Frankly, was trying to imply it was relatively straightforward. It's always possible a big company borks something easy, but I fully expect that the need to switch to the web to purchase a comic book will be only very marginally less convenient than in the app. (I admit that in the app would always be the more elegant system, but it really doesn't have to be a big deal if Amazon is smart about it.)

  • In-App purchases for Comixology haven't worked properly for me for ages, so I've always tended to buy via the website anyway.

    What I'd really like them to do is automatically download subscriptions when my iPad is plugged in and on WiFi. And also keep downloading when the screen turns itself off, under the same conditions.

  • There's a vastly depressing humor in all of this: both sides are monopolistic scum, so the least you can do is enjoy watching the evil twins fight amongst themselves. It's a really grim joke.

    The 30% "tax" that Apple charges at the App Store is immune to market forces. It makes no difference what sells or how much, Apple gets a phenomenal markup. It's all reward, no risk. When this happens at a large scale it means that capitalism is dead, and all the remains is monopoly.

    And before the ideological right zo

    • by asylumx ( 881307 )

      Both Amazon and Apple engage in the kind of "free market capitalism" that made the Soprano's famous: pay us or you won't be around very much longer. They have the same relationship with the market that a pig farmer has to his pigs. The pigs have very little say in the matter.

      Actually, I think the overall idea is more akin to renting a booth at a bazaar or flea market. The fact they are charging you to use their infrastructure doesn't seem all that bad. The 30% seems over the top to me and the extra rules

    • The previous article you refer to concerns Google owing $1B, not Amazon. I don't disagree with the rest of your screed.
    • by tepples ( 727027 )

      The 30% "tax" that Apple charges at the App Store is immune to market forces.

      How so? End users could always choose to switch to platforms that don't charge such tax.

      remember that there is a duopoly: Android and IOS.

      Both Google Play devices and Fire OS devices support Unknown sources. This allows Android to have multiple stores, and Amazon runs one of them.

      I don't have the reference at hand, but someone at Google recently stated that security is not guaranteed for Android.

      Could you please dig up the reference for us? Besides, in products for home use, security is practically never proven. Neither iOS nor Android has a published audit using formal methods [wikipedia.org].

      Their business model is all about not paying any tax to anybody anywhere anytime.

      When Caesar leaves loopholes, you'd have to have an intellectual disability not to use them [wikipedia.org].

  • I could imagine that a flat-fee per month could serve them and theirs customers well.

  • And advertise all the prices as "$7 + $3 Apple Tax"

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