Well this is a law suit waiting and begging to be picked up and they will
win it. This is going against the your US right as a citizen. Called Freedom
of speech and Freedom of Press! So I think this is why Apple changed it mind
This is like saying you can surf the internet but here is where you can go
and read and this it. This is not right for adults. Now for children under
the age of 18 this might have some value. So they I think should say yes you
can have it on the store but because of the nature of the app you need to
have some kind of age verification. But this is my thoughts and I been
around the legal system a long time.
 


Sign,
Joe Plummer ( JP )
[email protected]
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Sunday, April 18, 2010 12:48 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Fwd: Apple regulating news and political content???

I got this and thought it would be of  interest to some n the list.  Not
sure  what I think yet.  
Carolyn

        
        Mark Fiore's job is making fun of political figures. And he's
actually quite good at it, according to the Pulitzer Prize Committee.
         
        Earlier this week it named him the winner of the Pulitzer Prize in
editorial cartooning, but Apple rejected an iPhone app containing Fiore's
cartoons in
        December. The reason? Apple said applications that ridicule public
figures are not allowed.
         
        That presents a problem for Fiore, and all editorial cartoonists and
political satirists who'd like to submit their work to the App Store for
that matter,
        because, well, that's what they do.
         
        Luckily for Fiore, the Nieman Journalism Lab took up his cause and
wrote about his app's rejection. A day later Apple relented, and on Friday
asked Fiore
        to resubmit. The New York Times reported Friday afternoon that Steve
Jobs himself called it "a mistake that's being fixed." That's great for
Fiore, but
        not every political satirist is a Pulitzer winner who can get
publicity for his app's unfair rejection.
         
        So what does that mean for the future of news or editorial products
on the iPad and iPhone? It's safe to assume that quashing political satire
isn't Apple's
        goal here. But it's a legitimate concern for the journalism
community that to be featured on the App Store they have to submit their
news content to a
        company unafraid to exercise what sometimes seems like arbitrary
control. The thinking goes, what if Apple finds a headline offensive? Or
what if there's
        an unfavorable article about Apple itself even? That's not to say
Apple would do that, but its inconsistent handling of App Store submissions
sets a troubling
        precedent.
         
        The rejected-then-unrejected brouhaha surrounding Fiore's cartoon
app, and others like it--the Mad Magazine artist's Bobble Rep app comes to
mind--also
        illuminate the central issue facing Apple with the App Store right
now. The company's decision to tightly control what is and is not allowed on
the iPhone
        or iPad has led it to develop a review process that is not
sustainable.
         
        Having individuals look at each one of the hundreds of thousands of
apps that pour into the App Store and accurately and consistently police
them for both
        technical and content issues is impossible now and will only be more
so as the App Store inevitably grows. The solution would be to have clear,
stated
        rules of what can or can't be put on the App Store, but that's not
what Apple has chosen. And that gray area is what scares developers who put
a lot of
        work into their apps, and who could be rejected outright for some
subjective problem an App Store reviewer has found with that particular app.
         
        Which brings us back to the news issue. The problem of Apple's lack
of transparency with App Store rules and tendency toward control is
compounded by Apple
        luring the print news industry to the iPad. It's a device that
(rightly or wrongly) is being praised as a way to save print publications.
And that control
        inevitably raises new questions about Apple's relationship with
newspapers, like The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal for example,
that are putting
        their content on the App Store via paid applications.
         
        The Columbia Journalism Review has issued a call to media companies
not to get too cozy with Apple. Writes Ryan Chittum:
         
        Look, let's face it. The iPad is the most exciting opportunity for
the media in many years. But if the press is ceding gatekeeper status, even
if it's
        only nominally, over its speech, then it is making a dangerous
mistake. Unless Apple explicitly gives the press complete control over its
ability to publish
        what it sees fit, the news media needs to yank its apps in protest.
         
        Yes, this is that serious. It needs to wrest back control of its
speech from Apple Inc.
         
        The CJR then points out the obvious: newspapers and magazines
wouldn't put itself under the influence of the government like this, so why
is a corporation,
        especially one with control-freak tendencies like Apple, any
different?
         
        If the iPad does become a significant revenue source for print
publications who turn their newspapers or magazines into iPad apps, it is
logical that it
        could be harder for them to stand up to Apple.
         
         
         
         


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