'BadApple' podcasts first in iTunes

By John Borland
http://news.com.com/BadApple+podcasts+first+in+iTunes/2100-1027_3-5754227.ht
ml

Story last modified Mon Jun 20 12:27:00 PDT 2005

A new company called BadFruit has anticipated Apple Computer's plans to add
podcasting support to iTunes, with a software plug-in called "BadApple" that
does the trick itself.

As yet, the programmers behind the BadFruit site are remaining anonymous,
although several clues point to a corporate identity. Unlike most
basement-hacker projects, the software comes with a sophisticated privacy
policy and terms of use that may indicate bigger plans for the future.

For now, the plug-in provides seamless access to hundreds of podcasts inside
the iTunes shell, with downloads functioning in much the same way that the
iTunes music store itself works.

"BadApple is NOT from the Beatles," the bare-bones site reads. "It's also
not from Apple Computer Inc. It's definitely not endorsed or approved by
Apple. In fact, I'm pretty sure they wouldn't want you to use BadApple."

Podcasting--the practice of recording and distributing MP3 files that can be
automatically downloaded and put on digital music players such as the
iPod--has in the space of months evolved from a hobbyists' tool to adoption
by some of the biggest media companies in the world.

Less than year old in their current form, podcasts initially were dominated
by the often-eccentric recorded ramblings of the high-tech crowd. But
they've quickly evolved into a widespread distribution format, with major
media companies such as Clear Channel and BusinessWeek jumping onboard.

Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced several weeks ago that the next version of
iTunes would have support for creating and distributing podcasts. He
demonstrated the capability at the company's developers conference two weeks
ago, explaining that the service would let people subscribe to individual
broadcasts, and provide a way for podcasters to charge for their
productions.

"We see it as the hottest thing going in radio, hotter than anything else in
radio," Jobs told the audience of Macintosh developers at that event.

At this point, there is no official indication of BadFruit's origin. But a
handful of signs seem to link the site to MP3Tunes.com, the online song
store opened a few months ago by MP3.com founder Michael Robertson.

Log files created by the software show that it talks to a server hosted by
MP3Tunes. Code inside the software package, once downloaded, also show links
to MP3Tunes.

The privacy policies displayed by MP3Tunes.com and BadFruit are also
identical in almost every way, with details such as the name of the company
and the name of the service changed. BadFruit's terms of use say that any
legal actions concerning the software should be taken in San Diego county,
where Robertson's companies are based.

An Apple spokeswoman did not immediately return calls for comment.

An MP3Tunes employee said that Robertson was out of the country and
unavailable for comment. 



You are a subscribed member of the infowarrior list. Visit 
www.infowarrior.org for list information or to unsubscribe. This message 
may be redistributed freely in its entirety. Any and all copyrights 
appearing in list messages are maintained by their respective owners.

Reply via email to