Apple eBook Rules Changing For Sellers
An anonymous reader writes "In a 'pray I don't alter it again' moment for eBook sellers on apple iPad and iPhone devices, Apple is now requiring third-party eBook sellers like Amazon to also make their titles available through the Apple store, wherein the empire will take an additional 30% cut. 'Apple confirmed Tuesday that it would require app developers that sell e-books outside of their iPad and iPhone apps — through a Web site, for example — to also sell the books inside those apps. And purchases that originate in the app must be made through Apple, which keeps a 30 percent cut.'"
Apple is better than anyone at getting the most revenue out of a product or service while impacting users the least. Sony is one of the worst--look at the crap they tried to do with MiniDiscs. Apple knows where to get money where it won't irritate people to the point of cutting into their market share, and they know where NOT to get money. Good or bad depends on your point of view, but nobody can milk a cash cow like Apple.
In a "pray I don't alter it any further" moment...
Fixed that for you.
Funny may not give karma, but +5 Informative never made anyone snort coffee out their nose.
Look folks, it's a we told you so moment. You bought the shiny hardware despite the warnings that you're going to be trapped in a walled garden. You are now at the whims of Apple and it's your own damn fault.
So now, not only do sellers need to give (most) of the money to publishers, they now have to give another 30% to Apple. Since I know at least Amazon sells really close to their own cost (or even less, in some cases), this would mean Amazon either needs to take a loss on eBooks sold on Apple's platform, or else raise prices.
Which is probably what this really is all about. Force other eBook sellers to raise prices, and now Apple's own solution looks much more attractive. Sure, they can still sell on their own separate website, but users will likely just choose the easiest option and get turned off by the higher prices, thus not even checking out the website.
If you can't convince them, convict them.
In related news, Ford demands 30% cut on Latte sales at drive up coffee shops citing in-vehicle purchase rules.
Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
And everybody who sells software that could run on Windows should send Microsoft 30%, right?
I'm a fan of Apple and their iOS devices (though I know many are not). But I disagree with this change. To make it an option is all well and good, I'm all for it, but to make it a requirement is a step in the wrong direction. I, for one, will continue to purchase my books from Amazon.com. eReader apps help sell Apple devices. IMO, Apple should treat them with more courtesy than this.
Those who have telepathy have no need to RTFA.
...to purchase an Android based tablet/phone
Donte Alistair Anderson Roberts - hi son!
Karma: Chameleon
are you considering raising the costs 30% by taking a cut, 'impacting users the least' ? i want to know which planet you are from. in the one i currently am, costs reflect on the customer.
Read radical news here
Versatility is the reason we BOUGHT the freakin' things.
Well then you bought the wrong freakin' thing.
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
They are enforcing the original rules, which is that if you make an app that has a notion of in-app purchasing
Kindle App doesn't have in-app purchasing. It has a button for "Kindle Store", but that just opens the browser directing you to the appropriate section of their website, and all books are then purchased there. The trick is that once a book is purchased in the store, it is pushed to Kindle devices that you own - including the Kindle App. It looks like Apple is not happy about this.
Well, I don't see why Amazon should give Apple a cut in the above model, and if they ditch the app, I'm pretty sure I won't be buying iPad 2 (iBooks is meh).