FWIW, this is already what's happening with non-subscription content offered 
through the itunes store. I write fiction on the side, and my publisher offers 
e-book versions of their products through the itunes store. 
 
When they started selling through itunes, all the prices went up because Apple 
required that prices be a minimum which was higher than the lowest priced item 
(short stories sold individually) they offered before signing up with the 
itunes sotre, and that it not be available cheaper elsewhere. So a stand-alone 
short went from $1.50 to $1.99. Longer works went up in price similarly. 
 

Kathryn Smith, writing as Kathryn Scannell
http://kathryn-scannell.dreamwidth.org

--- On Thu, 2/17/11, Jurvis LaSalle <[email protected]> wrote:




Apple stipulates that the in-app price of content must be the same as 
elsewhere.  Content owners will have to raise prices across the board if they 
want to stay on iOS.  That means Ned will pay more so that the content 
providers can pay Apple.  

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