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Publisher Wiley's Books Pulled from Apple Stores

getling writes "Looks like Steve Jobs is almost as unhappy about personal details being publicized as he is with Mac secrets. The book publisher Wiley, who is releasing a new unauthorized biography of Jobs has had its entire line of books banned from Apple stores as a result of their unhappiness with the content of the book. Wiley, publisher of the popular Dummies series of books, as well as the Bible series, is quite surprised, due to the fact that they view the book to show Jobs in a largely positive light ..."

46 of 677 comments (clear)

  1. Rosebud! by SYFer · · Score: 5, Funny

    "That's all he ever wanted out of life... was love. That's the tragedy of Charles Foster Kane. You see, he just didn't have any to give."

    --
    "...all the labours of the ages, all the devotion, all the inspiration, all the noonday brightness..." yada yada
  2. Irony... by soapbox · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So isn't Apple/Steve sort of making the 'mercurial' and 'hot-tempered' point for the author? While the Woz has said that Jobs never treated him badly, he admitted that many people said they'd never work for Jobs again because of alleged mistreatment by Jobs (check out the mp3 of the HOPE keynote from 2004, in the Q&A, where an audience member asks about Jobs' behavior).

    1. Re:Irony... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Woz has said that Jobs never treated him badly

      That's not the case. Jobs screwed Wozniac when they created Breakout for Atari. Jobs pocketed the entire $5,000 bonus and half the $700 he was offered. Woz got $350 and none of the design bonus for the work he alone did.

    2. Re:Irony... by Martin+Blank · · Score: 5, Informative

      From "Broken Breakout Promises" which was the only other place that seemed to have the entire quote about the money, comes this bit to put it into context over the course of time.

      It wasn't the money that bothered Woz. Had Jobs asked, Wozniak would have done the project for free because he was turned on by such technological challenges. What hurt was being misled by his friend. Looking back on the incident, Wozniak realized Jobs' behavior was completely in character. "Steve had worked in surplus electronics and said if you can buy a part for 30 cents and sell it to this guy at the surplus store for $6, you don't have to tell him what you paid for it. It's worth $6 to the guy. And that was his philosophy of running a business," says Wozniak.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
  3. If he doesn't like the spotlight by Belzu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ....He should step away from it....

    1. Re:If he doesn't like the spotlight by tomhudson · · Score: 4, Insightful
      ... all this does is shine a REALLY BIG spotlight on it ...

      Another example of the law of unintended consequences. Mr. Jobs, meet Mr. Murphy. He also has a law you should know about.

    2. Re:If he doesn't like the spotlight by suyashs · · Score: 3, Funny

      I heard he refuses to install Tiger and insists on running Mac OS X 10.3.9...

      --
      http://chrono.posterous.com/
  4. The private life of public figures. by Space+cowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful


    Personally I'd be damn annoyed if people started publicising my illnesses, my past and my private life as well. For the second time no less! There's this myth that if you're a public figure you're not entitled to a private life. Bollocks.

    Speech is (and IMHO ought to be!) free, and the publishers are well within their rights to go against a man's wishes about his biography. Steve is also well within his rights to tell the publishers that they'll not sell a damn thing in his bookstores from now on.

    My sympathies are with the man whose life they're laying bare (irrespective of how they cast it) rather than the money-grabbing publishing house. "Quite surprised" is a laugh as well - they sent the proofs to Apple for approval and were asked to withhold publishing. WTF did they expect ?

    One of the things that seems to have been lost along the route to our western democracy is that actions have consequences. I'm made up that the act of publishing this book will cause them financial pain - perhaps it'll be as annoying to them as it obviously is to Steve that they've gone ahead and published. Perhaps it'll make them think twice about doing the same thing again...

    Before anyone gets on their high horse about the 'public's right to know', again, Bollocks. The public has a right to know if a public figure abuses his/her position - completely agree with that. On the other hand, this rather distasteful desire to simply nose into other peoples lives is a sad fact of the human condition today.

    Simon.

    --
    Physicists get Hadrons!
    1. Re:The private life of public figures. by tomhudson · · Score: 3, Funny
      for a publisher of tech manuals to start putting out this kind of celebrity drivel is bad form
      As long as O'Reilly doesn't start doing that shit ... I really don't want to read "Steve Jobs in a Nutshell" or "The Steve Jobs Cookbook".
    2. Re:The private life of public figures. by fname · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Number 1, they are not "his" stores. As CEO of Apple, he has a fiduciary responsible to Apple's owners (i.e., the shareholders). Pulling Wiley's books does not uphold this in any way; Steve Jobs is not Apple.

      Before anyone gets on their high horse... Maybe what you meant was before anyone else gets on their high horse? Consider this. Ten Speed Press has published a book called, "How Wal*Mart is Destroying the World." Ten Speed press has published other books such as "Better than Chocolate: 50 Proven Ways to Feel Happier." Guess what--- Wal*Mart happens to sell that book. Even the Most Evil Corporation on the Planet (TM) hasn't stooped down to Apple's level.

      So root for your Apple if that makes you feel good; they have every right to pull those books. But ask yourself this: what good has ever come from governments or corporations bullying the press? Are their citizens or customers somehoe better served? Will I have a better experience at The Apple Store because Apple has decided to pull some Mac books not because of their content but in retalitiation?

      I say all this a long-time Mac user, Apple shareholder and overall fan of the company. But Apple is doing no good by this act, and it only serves to make Apple a certified bully. Think Different, indeed.

    3. Re:The private life of public figures. by Fulkkari · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Steve Jobs is not Apple.

      Are you sure? What would Apple be without Steve Jobs? ...Absolutely nothing.

      --
      I demand the Cone of Silence!
    4. Re:The private life of public figures. by chrysrobyn · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Number 1, they are not "his" stores. As CEO of Apple, he has a fiduciary responsible to Apple's owners (i.e., the shareholders). Pulling Wiley's books does not uphold this in any way; Steve Jobs is not Apple.

      Steve Jobs is Apple. When Apple hired Jobs, they hired his charisma, his contacts, his reputation, his expertise. The CEO of every company is a figurehead, a spokesperson, a representative in every way. If Steve believes that this book casts his leadership in a negative way, then it is very easy to believe that it casts the company in the same negative way.

      I say all this a long-time Mac user, Apple shareholder and overall fan of the company.

      So you know something about the Apple's Reality Distortion Field. Wait, no, that didn't happen when Jobs wasn't there. Right. It's Jobs' Reality Distortion Field. The man is the company.

      But ask yourself this: what good has ever come from governments or corporations bullying the press?

      Do you believe that Apple / Jobs are bullying Wiley? Do you honestly think that Apple's online store is responsible for a noticable percentage of Wiley's sales? I've seen their books in almost every English book store I've walked into in the past 5 or 10 years. When you go to the Apple store, you buy hardware. You buy books at bn.com, amazon.com or your local bookstore / coffee shop.

    5. Re:The private life of public figures. by fm6 · · Score: 3, Funny

      He said that Apple did something that WalMart wouldn't do. That's not the same as saying that Apple is more evil than WalMart. By that logic, I'm more evil than Hitler, because he was kind to children, and I'm always mean to them.

  5. Silly me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
    And I thought the Book of Jobs was all about putting up with suffering without complaint.

    Book of Job? .. Oops.

  6. Two words. by Ph33r+th3+g(O)at · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Publicity. Stunt.

    --
    I too have felt the cold finger of injustice.
  7. Repeat after me by daveschroeder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While interesting,

    - Apple is not the government (therefore, any ridiculous cries of censorship are just a wee tad bit overboard)
    - Apple can do what it wants with its own corporate stores
    - Yes, this may result in more copies of the book being sold, but consider that this is not an effort to "suppress" the book; it's merely a retaliatory move. Apple is under no obligation whatsover, implied or otherwise, to carry any publisher's books.

    In short, business as usual and a BIG yawner:

    "It's certainly not unprecedented for a company to protest publication of a book or article it finds unflattering.

    IBM, for instance, staged a six-year advertising boycott of Fortune magazine after then-Chief Executive Louis V. Gerstner took exception to a 1997 cover story.

    More recently, General Motors withdrew its ads from the Los Angeles Times in protest of an April 6 review of its Pontiac G6."


    (From the Mercury News story)

    Think what you want, but businesses shouldn't be forced to support other businesses they disagree with.

    Further, it looks like there's a referrer in the submitter's amazon link. :-(

    1. Re:Repeat after me by Dhalka226 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Apple is under no obligation whatsover, implied or otherwise, to carry any publisher's books.

      No legal obligation, perhaps. What about obligation to their shareholders? They didn't just pull the book they don't care for--they pulled ALL of the books by this publisher. Wiley is a HUGE publisher and publishes the highly-successful "...For Dummies" series as well as many others.

      Apple isn't pulling these books for some great social good. They're not protesting anything that anybody can see except, apparently, the audacity of somebody to dare write a book about Steve Jobs. And to make this point they're pulling a successful publisher from their stores which is obviously going to cost them money and, very likely, stock price. Do they have no obligation to those people who own parts of their company?

  8. Bill Gates and Microsoft by dgmckay · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I agree that these guys have a right to some privacy. Most interesting to me is that the comments here on /. are generally supportive so far. What a different thread it would be if this had been Bill Gates and Microsoft instead of Steve Jobs and Apple.

  9. Good thing they didn't criticize a politican by davidwr · · Score: 4, Funny

    They'd have all their books banned from the Library of Congress.

    I wonder if that's what Sen. Trist meant by "Nuclear Option"?

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  10. Jobs replies by commodoresloat · · Score: 3, Funny
    Mr. Jobs, meet Mr. Murphy. He also has a law you should know about.

    Mr. Murphy, meet the Apple Legal Department. They know a thing or two about interpreting the law to my advantage.

    1. Re:Jobs replies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Apple Legal Department, meet Common Sense, I don't belive you two have met before...

  11. Icon or iCon... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 4, Funny

    So does the title "iCon" supposed be a stylish version of the word icon or does it represent a certain attitude: "I conned you into buying a nice OS on some very expensive hardware to make me a happy SOB"? For some reason, I keep thinking "iCon" might be a better title for a Martha Stewart book.

  12. Re:referrer in amazon link? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'd like to know who I'm supporting.

    Interesting. So do you think about who you're supporting every time you purchase a book from a store? Or how about when you buy a can of green beans from the SuperMarket? Do you know who you're supporting when you buy a piece of furnature at the store? How about when you watch ads on TV?

    Generally, the answer is always a "no" or a "sort of". There are so many people behind the scenes who make these things happen, that there's no way to account for all of them. If you want to boycott someone, your best solution is to first target them, then investigate where they derive money, then organize a boycott around their chokepoint. Your alternative of trying to divine the man behind the curtain in all instances, is both tedious and pointless.

    But hey, it's your time and energy.

  13. Re:referrer in amazon link? by DrEldarion · · Score: 5, Informative

    As someone who is a part of their referral program, I can say that is definitely NOT an affiliate link. It's just part of Amazon.

    The ref tag is rarely used for referral linking, and when it does, it looks something like "ref=ase_dealmeinnet-20" rather than that. I'm pretty sure that whenever the ref tag is used in regards to the affiliate program, it has ase in front of the affiliate tag.

    This is an affiliate link: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0471720836/ ref=nosim/dealmeinnet-20/ Note that the ref tag here is set to "nosim". That means that you don't get the item preview page, it brings you directly to the book page. The actual affiliate tag (dealmeinnet-20 in this case) came as a separate part of the URL.

  14. I think it would bother me more if... by Omnifarious · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think it would bother me a lot more if this meant that nobody got to see it. But Apple's economic power isn't that high. It still bothers me a little though.

    I believe firmly in the freedom of individuals to engage in whatever contracts they find mutually beneficial. But, I'm not so sure about a big, powerful public corporation. I think as organizations get larger and more powerful, they become more government-like. You die just as surely whether you starve because nobody will sell you food or someone shoots you.

  15. I see the new titles already by EverDense · · Score: 4, Funny

    Pissing off Major IT Corporations for Dummies. Character Assassination for Dummies. Making Bad Business Decisions for Dummies.

    --
    http://jesus.everdense.com/
  16. Re:referrer in amazon link? by NanoGator · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Here is a ref-free sanitized link:"

    Yeah, you wouldn't want the guy bringing you information that you found interesting to be rewarded or anything.

    The attitude some of you have about referrals really makes me sick. Never mind that this whole SITE that's bringing you this news article you find so fucking interesting is supported by ads.

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  17. Steve Jobs & Apple aren't synonymous by fname · · Score: 5, Interesting

    According to this, Steve Jobs owns 10.1 million shares (that figure may be pre-split) of Apple, or 1.2% of those outstanding. 10 million of those are restricted shares granted to him by Apple. Mr. Jobs had sold off all but one of his shares he received from the Next merger soon after it happened.

    So he's nowhere near a "majority" owner, and is only the second largest individual shareholder; at least 10 institutions control a bigger stake than Leader, aka Steve Jobs.

    1. Re:Steve Jobs & Apple aren't synonymous by Space+cowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I concede the point :-)

      Simon.

      --
      Physicists get Hadrons!
    2. Re:Steve Jobs & Apple aren't synonymous by fname · · Score: 5, Funny

      Wait a second, you can't concede the point. This is Slashdot, dammit. If people start conceding points the whole system could come crashing down!

      Flames! Trolls! Unspported facts! That's what Slashdot is about, not mature responses like conceding points; the system isn't set up to handle that!

  18. Come on People, Let's RTFA by bloodstar · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Keep in mind, the entire threat that was plied against J. Wiley & Sons was "Do not publish the book or we will stop carrying any of your works" There was no effort to have the book shipped to the various Apple stores (and even if there were, it would have been a simple matter for apple to quietly ship them back). This is simply a strong arm tactic when Apple decided to do some dick waving and Wiley called them on it. Now Apple can either continue to give the book free publicity and at the same time deny it's customer base access to some damn good reference books (in Apple stores, as I'm sure Borders or B&N Would be happy to sell you their reference stores); or they can sit down, and shut up, and in a few months (or years) quietly let the Wiley titles back into their stores.

    There will be no issue of lawsuit against the author or Wiley, unless somehow there were libel statements made in the book. The truth can't be libel, by definition. Remember once you're a public figure, you have a more limited right to privacy than otherwise is the case (It's may not seem fair, but those who wish to have the spotlight shined upon them, will sometimes have to accept the spotlight when it's not welcome).

    -Mark

    --
    "The bass, the rock, the mic, the treble. I like my coffee black, just like my metal" - Mindless Self Indulgence
  19. Balanced.. by Flaming+Death · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is _not_ a troll. It is a very sincere post questioning the readers of slashdot - it makes me wonder about the level of slashdot criticism.

    If this were a MS story of Bill Gates doing the same, there would be the usual crazy outbreak of 'MS evil empire' type banter. However, because its Apple , the response is a mild - 'oh its ok, hes the Apple man hes allowed to'. Where is the balance? I think somewhere in between to be honest - Jobs and Gates are simply very ruthless business persons, and yet here at Slashdot there is a decided overflow towards Apple.

    Is it the OSX thing - its not a free OS.. its not Open, so why the fanaticism, is it because its most Linux like? Windows has cygwin.. and I know a large number of IT specialists whom use it, but Windows is always rated as poor and irrevlevant (by the slashdot community), yet it is the most used desktop, by a rediculous majority? So where is the balance? Where is the even levelled intelligent arguments for both sides, that usually make for a great discussion?

    The more I visit here the more I see very common attitudes:
    - Apple and OSX rules, and every other platform/OS sux.
    - MS are evil and Windows sux.. but Xbox rules (this one has always been a bit of a conundrum - this must imply MS are less evil than Sony?)..
    - Sony are evil and PS2 is crap..
    - Linux and all Unix's are above all the best OS's and everything else is crap..
    - Any programming language that isnt C++ like or OO is crap..

    The above is a mere sample of generalisations and these are the usual source of flame wars. But the important thing about these topics, is that taking an opposing stance usually means getting flamed, chastised, or ridiculed.. It is even more interesting that moderators dont try to keep the discussion balanced, Im sure it would result in much better (more interesting) discussions, and a lot less ' is crap, or it sux'.

    This leads me to one fairly basic conclusion. Most of the people posting on Slashdot these days are young, easily impressionable males, that have little sense or understanding of two sides of a discussion and generally are very one-eyed about subjects with little or no flexibilty to gauge information as valid or relevant.

    1. Re:Balanced.. by Stormwatch · · Score: 4, Funny

      - Apple and OSX rules
      - MS are evil and Windows sux. but Xbox rules
      - Sony are evil and PS2 is crap.


      Yes, the aforementioned points are correct.

  20. Positive Light?!? by JasdonLe · · Score: 5, Informative

    Does *this* look positive to you?

    --
    ** A Sketch a Week **
    http://www.sketchplease.com
  21. Maybe it's the "iCon" title by tentimestwenty · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't know about you, but if someone wrote a book about me and titled it "iCon" I would be pretty offended. All those people going into the Apple store are immediately going to see Jobs' picture on the front and think he's a con artist. Doesn't exactly mesh with the honest Apple brand no matter what the pages say.

    1. Re:Maybe it's the "iCon" title by TheoMurpse · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Is everyone missing that "icon" can mean an important figure in history?

    2. Re:Maybe it's the "iCon" title by Vellmont · · Score: 4, Insightful


      All those people going into the Apple store are immediately going to see Jobs' picture on the front and think he's a con artist. Doesn't exactly mesh with the honest Apple brand no matter what the pages say.


      You missed it. Apple didn't just ban the unauthorized biography of Steve Jobs they banned the entire series of dummies books made by the same publisher. This biography was never going to appear in Apple stores since obviously Apple doesn't carry biographies in its stores, only computer help books.

      As far as Jobs is concerned, he goofed on this one. His actions only prove he's an impulsive hothead (not that there's not a dozen other things he's done publically to prove that). The biography just got a huge amount of free publicity it normally wouldn't have. I certainly never would have heard about it, and now maybe I'll buy a copy when it comes out. The dummies books are so popular that the Apple Store will look incomplete without them. People will ask about them, then go to Barnes And Noble on the other side of the mall to buy one. My prediction is they'll re-appear quietly in 6-12 months.

      --
      AccountKiller
  22. Re:referrer in amazon link? by NanoGator · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Okkkaaayyyy... And why is the referrer such a big problem again?"

    Advertising in general has been abused. Flash ads, pop-up sites, adverts that look like news, etc. A lot of people are sick of them, so they've developed a bad attitude about advertising in general. You see, it's too hard to distinguish between advertising and abusive advertising. It's easier to remember to hate 'ads'. Never mind that those very ads basically provide services to you that you don't have to pay out of pocket for (i.e. television, radio, Slashdot...), a few people ruined ads for EVERYBODY.

    Somehow, referrals fell into this trap, too. Evidently, it's okay to buy a book, but it's not okay to buy the book from the guy who convinced you to buy it. I probably wouldn't be replying if the choice was between buying it and not buying it, but stripping the referal information out? WTF? Talk about judgement mis-fire.

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  23. Re:Here we go again... by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Steve Jobs is an unbelievable asshole. Seriously, you think you know assholes? Steve Jobs makes them all look like girl scouts. He's the biggest asshole I've ever encountered, ever.

    He's also a hands-down, certifiable genius.

    The fact that he's an asshole really pales in comparison to what he's capable of doing. The man is like some kind of magic crap detector. He can smell crap from ten miles away. And when he sees it, he can tell you exactly why it's crap, and exactly what needs to change to eliminate its crappiness.

    Steve Jobs is the most arrogant man I know, but he's also the man most deserving of open, unapologetic arrogance I know.

    At least for me, it's possible to personally dislike somebody and admire him at the same time.

  24. Shitty PR for a bit of megalomania by theolein · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is bad news for Apple, its customers (i.e. me and everyone else using a Mac or an iPod), and its shareholders.

    No one likes an arrogant arsehole, and people like arrogant arseholes even less who act like mini dictators. It's not like Apple has a 90% marketshare in the computer market to play with, and investors shy away from erratic, irrational CEOs. I can understand him withdrawing the book on his life from the Apple store shelves, as he has the power to do that, but the Dumies series is extremely popular and it could make an enemy of extremely influential people like David Pogue, whose NYTimes tech articles get read by millions.

    What worries me most about this is that it reminds me of the bat shit megalomanic attitude that Jobs had before he was canned from Apple the first time in 1985, trying to push others around.

    Steve, if you or one of your slaves is reading this, take these words of advice: You, as a celebrity and CEO of a very trendy company, give away a certain amount of privacy as part of your status. You, like me and everyone else, are not an island. You depend on literally millions of other people for your success, from customers, to shareholders, to employees, to reviewers, to the press. Think about that before you fly into a rage like a spoilt five year old brat the next time.

  25. Re:Selling 30 cent parts for $6 by kfg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When I pay a buck for a 24 oz. Coke in a cup at the local convenience store I know their cost was about three cents, and two of those were for the cup.

    I also know it's still a good enough deal for me, because a 16 oz. Coke in a bottle is going to cost me more.I'll pay the buck.

    It's good business all around, even though I'm paying more than I theoretically need to for the Coke.

    If, however, I own and operate a convenience store, drink Cokes at three cents a pop out of the business profits, but charge my financial partner a buck a Coke when he comes into the store and stick 97 cents of it in my own pocket, that isn't "good business." That's being a scum sucking bastard.

    KFG

  26. You are a good little corporate citizen by JoeBuck · · Score: 5, Insightful
    You think that there is something morally wrong with an "unauthorized" biography? What kind of a tool are you, anyway? This is a democracy; a free press is not some annoying thing we have to put up with, it's something we fought for. "Unauthorized" biographies are the only kind worth reading.

    Apple is not refusing to sell just this book; it is refusing to sell any of the large number of Mac books put out by this publisher. The decision will cost the shareholders money, as the Apple stores profited on each book sold, and they sold quite a few.

    Now, it's not horrible and evil, so I'll agree with you there. It's merely massively stupid, and the press that this move has gotten will improve the book sales.

  27. Just a minor point. by TheOriginalRevdoc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Fact: The biography was unauthorized, which is legal, but not really that morally okay, especially when the biography is about someone who's still alive."

    Curious logic there... so a biography has to be authorised, huh? Like, say, a newspaper story about someone has to be authorised? Or an encyclopedia entry? Do you realise that you'll just end up with self-serving crap if you do that, don't you?

    How about this for a correction:

    Fact: Jobs is a public figure, and his decisions affect large numbers of people. He is also charismatic and famous. An unauthorised biography of Jobs is therefore is a fair and reasonable thing, provided the content of the biography is obtained legally and without deception.

  28. Re:Sue, sue and sue by Vellmont · · Score: 3, Interesting


    the only question would be whether they gained more than they lost by pissing off Apple.


    Apple only has about 100 stores, and they don't sell primarily books. As far as retailers of Dummies books go, I'd bet Apple stores are a drop in the bucket. The only reason Apple has the books is to sell more computers. Dummies books being absent from Apple stores will hurt Apple more than it ever would hurt Wiley.

    --
    AccountKiller
  29. No, lemming, get a clue by Moraelin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I find it hillarious and sad at the same time that the nation most proud of their "freedoms" has no fucking clue what those freedom mean. I've seen "freedom of press", "freedom of speech" or "democracy" used for every possible bullshit (e.g., as some "right" to troll a site or cheat in an online game) _except_ the cases they actually cover.

    Here's some free clue: "Freedom of Speech" and "Freedom of Press":

    1. Are _only_ applicable to your dealing with the _government_. Not with private persons, not with corporations, not with anyone else.

    I.e., pay attention, lemming: it means that the government can't ban you from saying that Kerry was a better candidate than Bush, or viceversa. It doesn't however mean that Bush, as a private citizen, can't sue your pants off if you publish libel about him. E.g., if you were to start writing that Bush rapes small babies, he could very well sue your pants off, and "freedom of speech" would have nothing to do with it.

    2. It never said that anyone has to print, broadcast or help sell your bullshit. If anyone, _including_ the government, doesn't want to publish your speech, sell your book, or pay for public access to your blog, they _are_ entirely within their legal righst.

    E.g., "freedom of press" does _not_ mean you can go to NYT and have them publish whatever you want published in their newspaper. As they say, "freedom of press" only applies to whoever owns the press.

    E.g., if Apple doesn't want to sell another company's books, "free press" and "democracy" have exactly _nothing_ to do with it.

    E.g., if an ISP (even a state owned one) decided to unilaterally block all porn sites, or even all opposition sites, they _are_ within their legal rights to do so. Bad PR move? Yes. Violating your sacred "freedom of speech" or "democracy"? Nope.

    3. Additionally "democracy" _only_ means you get to vote for your government. Period. Nothing more. It doesn't mean you get a vote in what books Apple should sell. It does _not_ mean you should get a vote even in what your CEO or CIO decides.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
  30. Re:Funny you should mention this by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 5, Funny

    My big problem with iPhoto is the way it insists on moving all the JPEGs around and naming them according to its own whims.

    That's iPhoto's purpose in life. Your objection is like saying, "My big problem with Excel is the way it adds all the numbers together."

    Just out of my own curiosity ... are you also one of those guys who complains that iTunes organizes your music for you? I ask because those guys are impossible for me to understand. We rolled out a product that was basically the holy grail of music management, and they complained that it managed their music for them. They insisted that they would rather name and sort each of 20,000 tiny files themselves, with all the obsessive focus of an autistic kid counting paper clips. It was freaky.