Apple’s Vague Subscription Policy Sows Confusion, Doubt
Posted in: Apple, developers, ios, ipad, iPhone, Phones, Today's Chili
Steve Jobs introduces the iPad in a January 2010 event. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com
The fumbled introduction of in-app subscriptions shows that when it comes to charging for subscription services online, Apple is just as confused as everyone else.
The widely anticipated policy allows publishers, including Wired, to charge subscription fees for recurring content. But while this is in principle a feature that both publishers and readers actually want, the announcement has been met with derision and complaints about the extortionate rates Apple is charging.
Clearly, Apple misjudged its audience.
Adding to the confusion is the fact that no one really knows what counts as a “publisher.” Wired parent Condé Nast certainly is. But what about the makers of Dropbox or Evernote, to name two popular cloud-based services that charge premium customers with a monthly subscription model?
Apple’s new in-app subscriptions policy requires publishers of “content-based apps, including magazines, newspapers, video, music, etc.” to pay a 30-percent cut to Apple for every subscription sale made inside iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch apps, according to Apple. So for example, when an iPad customer purchases a subscription of The Daily newspaper through the app, Apple takes a 30-percent cut of the subscription sale. Sounds about reasonable.
To anybody who’s even idly followed Apple in the past few years, this shouldn’t come as a surprise at all. Currently for every app that costs money on the App Store, Apple takes 30 percent of each sale, leaving the software developer with a generous 70-percent cut.
Publishers can still take subscription payments outside the apps — for instance, on their own websites — and when they do, they keep 100 percent of the proceeds, as Jobs was careful to point out.
But the new in-app policy is more strict and more confusing than it initially appears.
Publishers that offer alternative means of subscription must also offer Apple’s in-app purchase system, and subscriptions offered outside the App Store can’t undercut the in-app price. Also, only the in-app sale option can appear inside the app; external links are not allowed.
Here’s where things get really confusing: The iOS developer agreement states that “Apps utilizing a system other than the In App Purchase API (IAP) to purchase content, functionality or services in an app will be rejected.”
Certainly any app would fall under that category, wouldn’t it? So now is everybody a publisher of “content-based apps”? That language would suggest so.
In-app payments sound more convenient for iOS customers, but the wording of the policy is loaded and vague. Every app can be seen as something that provides content, functionality or services, but Apple particularly describes this policy as applying to publishers of “content-based” apps.
What about companies that provide paid, subscription-based software services through an app, such as Dropbox, Evernote and Salesforce? Marco Arment, developer of the iOS app Instapaper, points out these apps offer paid services outside the iOS payment system. Should they be rejected for not doing so? That would upset everybody, but it would only seem fair.
Those apps haven’t been pulled. And if a purported Steve Jobs e-mail is to be believed, they aren’t going to be — although it’s hard to say. The e-mail merely states, “We created subscriptions for publishing apps, not [software-as-a-service] apps.”
The bottom line is that Apple has managed to make its App Store review policy even more confusing and vague than it already was previously, and this disarray may discourage businesses from participating, Arment says.
“This policy will prevent many potentially great apps, from many large and small publishers, from being created on iOS at all,” Arment says in his blog.
A large contributor to the confusion is that Apple is creating an invisible hierarchy inside the App Store. Traditional publishers have been receiving different treatment than everybody else for over a year. In early 2010, Apple approved the Playboy and Sports Illustrated apps, for example, while banning a plethora of sex-tinged apps made by smaller companies.
“The difference is this is a well-known company with previously published material available broadly in a well-accepted format,” Schiller told The New York Times last year.
Herein lies the problem: Apple seems to think there’s a difference between a media organization publishing a magazine through an app and a software maker publishing a service through an app. While there are obvious differences between the products provided, the fundamentals are the same: These are companies using Apple’s app channel to sell product.
From a media publisher’s perspective, it probably doesn’t seem fair to be stuck with different rules.
And from a software service provider’s perspective, it’s uncertain what it can or cannot do in the coming future given the broad wording of the new policy, and Jobs’ apparent statement that the policy doesn’t even apply.
If Apple wants to give different kinds of publishers different rules, they should give them a separate channel in iTunes, where partnerships are firmly established in inked agreements between publishers and Apple.
Why not create a separate store for magazine and serials publishers, just as Apple has done with book publishers in iBooks?
By giving publishers a separate place to play ball, Apple could also grant them access to an important resource: user data. The New York Times‘ David Carr points out that publishers are less concerned about the revenue split than they are about the difficulty of collecting user data with in-app subscriptions.
Apple only allows user data to be shared with the publisher if the user gives permission. When a customer chooses to subscribe to a publication, a message pops up saying, “The developer would like your name, e-mail, and zip code so they can send you messages about related products in accordance with their privacy policy.” Who would hit OK on that? Tracking user data is crucial for a business that relies heavily on ad targeting, but Apple’s privacy policy creates a high hurdle.
Keeping developers in the same arena as publishers while enforcing rules inconsistently creates an atmosphere of unfair play, and suddenly the App Store no longer feels like the “best deal going” for mobile apps.
See Also:
- IPad Apps Could Put Apple in Charge of the News
- iPad Developers Code Their Apps in the Dark
- A Call for Transparency in Apple’s App Store
SlingPlayer Mobile for iPhone & iPad updated with video out support
Posted in: app, Apple, ios, ipad, iPhone, ipod, itunes, Today's ChiliIf you have an iPod, iPhone or iPad with the SlingPlayer Mobile app, you now have a Slingbox to go since the app was just updated with support for video out over component cables in high quality mode. Version 2.1 also includes a few unspecified bugfixes, but we’re figuring the opportunity to watch TV, on a TV in high bitrate streams is more than enough to get users mashing that update button and digging out their unused connectors.
[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
SlingPlayer Mobile for iPhone & iPad updated with video out support originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Feb 2011 12:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Five Things We Want From the New iPad, and Why
Posted in: ipad, Tablets and E-Readers, Today's ChiliApple will announce the iPad 2 next Wednesday, March 2nd, as made rather obvious by invites sent out to press this morning. Apart from the new iPad, that means one thing: speculation. I’m not immune, so here’s my list of things I think will make it into an already capable machine. I have stuck to features, rather than things like CPU speed, as the internal specifics matter less than what they actually enable you to do.
Cameras
Obvious, this one. We’re almost certain there will be a front-facing camera for FaceTime and other webchat applications, but I really don’t care. I’ll use that for Skype once in a while and that’s it. What I want is a decent rear-facing camera, like that in the iPhone (not the crippled piece of junk in the iPod Touch).
Why? Because it would be so useful, and not just for photography. Augmented reality, Instagram, scanning things, snapping photos and then drawing on top of them, the list goes on. One of the things I took away from all the tablets I tried at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona last week was just how good a camera is on a big device. It seems like it would be awkward, but the big screen is great for composing and the size turns out not to matter at all.
Speakers
The single iPad speaker isn’t bad, but for movies and music you really want something beefier, and preferably in stereo. The rumors point to at least one big speaker grille on the back of the iPad’s case. Currently I get around this with an assortment of Bluetooth speakers around my apartment, but I’d rather do without them.
SD Card Slot
This one would be purely for importing photos and video. Basically, it would be nothing more than a built-in camera connection kit. The Apple’s Camera Connection Kit is great, but it is one more thing to lose and carry. I use my iPad more and more for processing photos (courtesy of Photogene and FX PhotoStudioHD), and until I can send direct from my camera via Eye-Fi, a slot is a lot more convenient than yet another dongle in my bag.
A Better Connector
The 30-pin dock connector is one of the worst things Apple has made (the other is “all mice it has ever created”). It is symmetrical, so it’s hard to put in the right way in bad light. It’s delicate (the cord breaks easily where it enters the plug) and worst of all, it’s huge. In fact, the iPod Nano is barely big enough for the connector slot.
The likeliest candidate for a replacement is Light Peak, or Apple’s rumored implementation of it, Thunderbolt, which might show up in this week’s new MacBook Pros. This could be a small port that could carry power and data of any kind. That in itself would be good enough, but you know what I’d really like? A Thunderbolt data-cable with a MagSafe plug. That would be just about perfect.
Better Case
The size and weight of the current iPad are just fine. Anyone who complains that a 1.5 pound sliver of aluminum and glass is too heavy needs to shut up and go join a gym. But it is slippery. I keep mine in Apple’s own case 24/7. This is partly to protect the screen, but mostly to stop me dropping it, especially when I’m walking on crutches with it tucked under my arm.
A little more friction on the back would help a lot. Perhaps a plastic rear, or just a grippy coating.
Bonus: The Screen
This is a small request. I don’t want a retina display (or rather I do, but I don’t want the current penalties of price and battery life associated with it). All I want is a dimmer screen. The brightness at the top end is fine, but even at its dimmest setting, the screen is too bright for using indoors at night. It’s true, I keep my apartment fairly dim (I call it “moody and romantic,” but you may call it “cheap”), but unless you keep your place lit up like an office, the screen glows a little too much.
Those are my requests. What about yours? Do you want a built in printer? A near-field communications chip to turn your iPad into the world’s biggest wallet? Or even a flashlight? Let us know your suggestions, as ever, in the comments.
Apple Confirms March 2 iPad Event [Apple]
Posted in: Apple, ipad, ipad 2, Today's Chili, top Apple just confirmed their leaked iPad event by sending out invites to the press. Usually it’s not this obvious what Apple’s announcements are about, but this has the corner of an iPad right there in the image. [Engadget] More »
Apple’s holding an iPad 2 event on March 2nd… we’ll be there live!
Posted in: Apple, breaking news, ipad, ipad 2, Ipad2, Today's ChiliApple’s holding an iPad 2 event on March 2nd… we’ll be there live! originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Feb 2011 11:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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The Pocket Stand, an iPad Stand and Amplifier
Posted in: Accessories and Peripherals, ipad, Today's Chili
The Pocket Stand x 2. Photo: Mike Paek
Another day, another awesome Kickstarter project. This time, the proposal up on the America’s Next Top Gadget stage is the Pocket Stand, a tiny support and amplifier for the iPad.
The stand is a tiny, clip-on widget that will hold the iPad in the three familiar positions: Upright in horizontal and vertical orientations, and down on the desk with a tilt for easy typing. This is the same as any number of other products.
The gimmick here is the amplifier, courtesy of a passive horn speaker built into the body of the stand. It takes the iPad’s puny output and guides it through an acoustic cavity, letting it relax, stretch and decompress. At the other end, the sound emerges refreshed and 7-10dB louder. A video shows the difference.
The design, by Mike Paek and Sam Chan, has been through many 3D printed prototypes to hone and tune the sound. Amazingly, the result looks a lot like a human ear. The Pocket Stand is made of a skid-proof “rubber-like” polymer, and will be injection molded. It will cost $20.
As ever with Kickstarter, you need to pledge some money to get the project started, and you’ll be charged only if it reaches its $15,000 goal.
I like this widget, but what really sold me on this pitch is the video, embedded at the top of this post. It’s the first Kickstarter video I have seen with outtakes included at the end. Nice touch.
The Pocket Stand – iPad Amplifier & Stand [Kickstarter. Thanks, Mike!]
Everything Apple (Might) Have Up Its Sleeve [News]
Posted in: Apple, ipad, ipad 2, macbook, macbook pro, rumors, Today's Chili, top Apple fans! Apple detractors too! Exciting new stuff is almost here. Keyboards around the world are clacking with anticipation over new MacBooks and iPads—but rather than scouring the internet wastes, check out everything you need to know below. More »
Apple Will Unveil iPad 2 On March 2 [Apple]
Posted in: Apple, ipad, ipad 2, Today's Chili, top All Things D just reported that Apple will be holding their iPad 2 unveiling on March 2. No official invites have gone out yet, so think of this one as a strong rumor. Here’s an outline of what we think the next iPad is going to have. And even if you don’t believe ATD’s “confirmed” rumor, a bunch of signs are pointing at an event or announcement very soon. [AllThingsD] More »
Apple holding iPad 2 event next week?
Posted in: Apple, ipad, ipad 2, Ipad2, rumor, rumors, Today's ChiliWe’re all hotly expecting new MacBook Pros on Thursday, but it sounds like Apple might have an even bigger announcement soon: Kara Swisher at All Things Digital says the iPad 2 will be revealed on March 2 in San Francisco. That lines up with some of the rumblings we’ve heard, but we haven’t gotten an official invite yet, so things could change — we’ll let you know as soon as we hear anything definite.
Apple holding iPad 2 event next week? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Feb 2011 13:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.