News
August 3, 2013 08:10 AM ET
Computerworld - Apple on Friday responded to e-book price-fixing remedies proposed by the U.S. Department of Justice and 33 state attorneys general with, among other things, an implied threat that it could yank Amazon's Kindle app from its iPad and iPhone App Store.
"Apple is under no duty to allow other retailers to offer apps on the iPad," Apple said in its filing with a federal court.
The threat, however, was largely symbolic: If the court approves the government's proposal, Apple would not be allowed to drop any apps from its store.
The Cupertino, Calif. company's threat was part of its reply to the DOJ's proposal earlier on Friday. The remedies would force Apple to cancel existing e-book agreements with publishers, bar it from retaliating against publishers, and require that Apple let Amazon, Barnes & Noble and others include links to their e-book stores in their iOS apps.
The e-book retailers would be allowed to include links in their apps for two years, the DOJ said in its filing with the court. In a separate statement, the DOJ argued that the links would "reset competition to the conditions that existed before the conspiracy" and "let consumers ...easily compare Apple's prices with those of its competitors."
Such in-app links have been banned by Apple since 2011, when the company unveiled new App Store policies related to subscriptions and other digital content, saying that it deserved a 30% cut of all such revenue.
At the time, then-CEO Steve Jobs put it plainly: "Our philosophy is simple -- when Apple brings a new subscriber to the app, Apple earns a 30% share," he said in a February 2011 statement. "When the publisher brings an existing or new subscriber to the app, the publisher keeps 100% and Apple earns nothing."
Apple also said the new rules, which covered e-book publishers as well as newspaper and magazine publishers, required that content sellers remove links in their apps to external websites where customers could buy books or subscriptions.
Several months later, Amazon caved to Apple and removed links in its iOS apps that took customers directly to its Web-based store. Since then, Amazon's customers have had to exit the Kindle app, call up a browser and manually steer to the company's website to purchase a book. Other e-book retailers were forced to do the same to retain their apps in Apple's market.
Apple's own iBooks has been the exception; a button there lets customers buy books without exiting the app or opening a browser.
On Friday, Apple blasted the DOJ's suggestion that Apple exempt e-book retailers from long-standing App Store rules.
August 3, 2013 08:10 AM ET
Computerworld - Apple on Friday responded to e-book price-fixing remedies proposed by the U.S. Department of Justice and 33 state attorneys general with, among other things, an implied threat that it could yank Amazon's Kindle app from its iPad and iPhone App Store.
"Apple is under no duty to allow other retailers to offer apps on the iPad," Apple said in its filing with a federal court.
The threat, however, was largely symbolic: If the court approves the government's proposal, Apple would not be allowed to drop any apps from its store.
The Cupertino, Calif. company's threat was part of its reply to the DOJ's proposal earlier on Friday. The remedies would force Apple to cancel existing e-book agreements with publishers, bar it from retaliating against publishers, and require that Apple let Amazon, Barnes & Noble and others include links to their e-book stores in their iOS apps.
The e-book retailers would be allowed to include links in their apps for two years, the DOJ said in its filing with the court. In a separate statement, the DOJ argued that the links would "reset competition to the conditions that existed before the conspiracy" and "let consumers ...easily compare Apple's prices with those of its competitors."
Such in-app links have been banned by Apple since 2011, when the company unveiled new App Store policies related to subscriptions and other digital content, saying that it deserved a 30% cut of all such revenue.
At the time, then-CEO Steve Jobs put it plainly: "Our philosophy is simple -- when Apple brings a new subscriber to the app, Apple earns a 30% share," he said in a February 2011 statement. "When the publisher brings an existing or new subscriber to the app, the publisher keeps 100% and Apple earns nothing."
Apple also said the new rules, which covered e-book publishers as well as newspaper and magazine publishers, required that content sellers remove links in their apps to external websites where customers could buy books or subscriptions.
Several months later, Amazon caved to Apple and removed links in its iOS apps that took customers directly to its Web-based store. Since then, Amazon's customers have had to exit the Kindle app, call up a browser and manually steer to the company's website to purchase a book. Other e-book retailers were forced to do the same to retain their apps in Apple's market.
Apple's own iBooks has been the exception; a button there lets customers buy books without exiting the app or opening a browser.
On Friday, Apple blasted the DOJ's suggestion that Apple exempt e-book retailers from long-standing App Store rules.
