From: tech...@groups.io <tech...@groups.io> On Behalf Of David Goldfield
Sent: Thursday, April 4, 2024 3:52 AM
To: List <tech...@groups.io>
Subject: [Tech-VI] From Jonathan Mosen: I wish Voice Dream Reader a bright 
future, but they have breached Apple’s Guidelines. Apple must protect consumers 
with swift action – Mosen At Large


https://mosen.org/voicedream/
I wish Voice Dream Reader a bright future, but they have breached Apple’s 
Guidelines. Apple must protect consumers with swift action
Jonathan Mosen <https://mosen.org/author/jmosen/> Posted on 
04/04/2024<https://mosen.org/voicedream/> Posted in 
commentary<https://mosen.org/category/commentary/>, 
iOS<https://mosen.org/category/ios/>
Key points

  *   Voice Dream Reader was bought by new owners last year.
  *   They moved to a subscription model for new customers shortly after the 
acquisition.
  *   There has been robust debate about whether the pricing represents value 
for money, but new features and greater stability are promised.
  *   Unless existing customers pay, they will lose critical functions of the 
app on 1 May.
  *   This violates Apple’s App Review Guidelines.
  *   I encourage everyone to contact Voice Dream Support and Apple to ensure 
that the Guidelines are enforced.

Background

If you use an iPhone and you’re blind, you’ve probably heard of Voice Dream 
Reader.<https://voicedream.com/> It was the brainchild of a software developer 
named Winston Chen, and released in around 2012.

Winston was an example of indie mobile app developers who get it right. He 
engaged with his users, and seemed to understand that many of us in the blind 
community have certain cultural expectations around the technology we use.

It’s become a bit of a cliché, but it’s true. Nothing about us without us is 
important to many of us. We want to be listened to. We want to have a hand in 
the future of the product. If a developer is willing to engage with us 
meaningfully, great things can happen.

Winston issued frequent updates. The app’s feature set grew in response to the 
feedback he got from people like us. As a result of the exceptional app and 
customer service, by 2013 he was making enough money from what began as a side 
project that he quit his job and worked on Voice Dream full-time.

He developed some other products, some of which still exist, but Reader was 
always the flagship.

Voice Dream Reader caters to several market segments. The app benefits those 
with dyslexia and other print impairments.

There are also people who are not disabled who just want to be read to.

While there are other reader apps, I have not found a single app that offers 
the breadth of features that are in Voice Dream Reader. It would take at least 
two apps to replace it. For me, having one place in which all content I want to 
read can be found makes things simple. There are also some unique navigation 
methods that make moving around a document straightforward, and it works well 
with Braille displays.

Changing of the guard

Last year, Winston Chen sold the app he created to a company called Applause 
Group. I was pleased to speak with Kishin Manglani, one of the Founders of 
Applause Group, for a recent episode of the Living Blindfully 
Podcast.<https://livingblindfully.com/275> When I asked him to explain what 
Applause Group does, he said,

“Applause Group operates mobile apps, and we typically work with independent 
developers who want to hand over their reins after working on the app for many 
years, oftentimes for over a decade. You know, these apps often take a lot of 
time, effort, and passion to build and maintain. And sometimes, the owners want 
to stop working on them for personal reasons, or to go work on something else, 
and they want to pass the torch to someone else who can build and maintain the 
app. We continue where they left off and build, maintain, and support the apps 
for the communities that they serve.”

Unfortunately, the relationship between Voice Dream Reader’s new owners and its 
engaged user base got off to a rocky start. Members of the online blind 
community did not find out about the sale of Voice Dream Reader last year from 
either the buyer or the seller. Instead, they found out because an indie 
developer who offers a product that competes in some ways with Voice Dream 
Reader discovered a new subscription option in a just-released build of Voice 
Dream Reader. He, not anyone associated with the app, broke the news to the 
blind community that subscriptions were on the way.

When a developer moves from a one-off purchase model to a subscription-based 
model, it is always controversial, even if said company makes great efforts to 
communicate it thoroughly. When you add an unpopular change, the departure of a 
popular indie developer, and nonexistent communication together, those 
ingredients add up to an inevitable firestorm. In the absence of information to 
the contrary, existing customers were concerned that they were about to be 
charged.

Applause Group must have heard about the depth of feeling on the issue because 
they posted to a forum topic discussing the matter on 
AppleVis.<https://applevis.com/>

This is what Applause Group wrote back in 2023:

“Hi all,

Voice Dream team here.

Existing users should not be affected and will continue to have access to the 
app. We are migrating to a subscription model only for new users.

If you have any issues, please feel free to contact our support team.”

Having described this as a firestorm, I will mix my metaphors and say that this 
was the oil that needed to be poured on troubled waters. The fuss died down, 
and anecdotal evidence suggests that most people felt that this was a 
reasonable approach to take.

Changing of the mind

Towards the end of March 2024, word started coming through that there had been 
a policy change. Starting on 1 May, all Voice Dream Reader users would be 
charged a subscription. For existing customers who had paid for the app in the 
past, they said a subscription would cost $59.95 USD per year, which they say 
is a discount on the $79 price they will usually charge. For that, you get all 
the voices they have to offer, plus it will work on iPhone, iPad, Mac and Apple 
Watch with the one subscription. They promise that a more consistent revenue 
stream will help them do many things, including expanding developer resources, 
keeping the app maintained, improving the app on Apple Watch and helping fund 
substantive new features including Amazon Kindle support, which is almost ready 
to go.

What’s it worth?

$60 USD a year, let alone the full price, is high by Apple subscription 
standards.

Some will decide that they don’t get $60 worth of value from the app, and 
that’s a reasonable, rational economic decision. If someone is selling 
something at a price point we don’t wish to pay, then there’s no sale. If 
sufficient people feel that way, then perhaps Applause Group will need to think 
again about their pricing model.

However, we should not forget another important category of users. Given the 
nature of our community, where far too many of us are overlooked when it comes 
to employment, it’s a category that is far too large. There will be some who 
will feel the loss of the app, but genuinely don’t believe they can scrape up 
that kind of money.

It is to Applause Group’s credit that in response to feedback, they have 
introduced a monthly option as well as the annual one. Paying by the month 
works out slightly more expensive, which is typical. Companies usually 
incentivise paying by the year, which helps a company with its annual planning.

Applause Group has actively been engaged in trust-building measures with the 
community in recent days. They didn’t have to appear on Living Blindfully and 
face tough questions, but they fronted up, to their great credit. They have now 
also established a group on Groups.io.<https://groups.io/g/Voice-Dream> As I 
write this, the group is very new, but it has already received a contribution 
from Kishen, and that is encouraging.

Having run my own company and worked in several others, including in the 
blindness technology space, I’m sympathetic towards Applause Group and their 
need to find a sustainable business model for the app. If it were shut down 
because Applause Group considered it not to be viable, I would miss it. Not 
everyone can do so, but for now I am able to pay the subscription, and almost 
certainly will.

There is, however, something that is leaving a sour taste. Users who are 
unwilling or unable to pay a subscription will lose the ability to add new 
content to their Voice Dream Reader library, thus rendering the app useless 
once they have read all the current material they have uploaded to the app. To 
put it clearly, Applause Group wants existing customers to pay a second time to 
retain functionality they already paid for.

Breach of Apple’s App Review Guidelines

When a developer publishes an app in the App Store, they must comply with 
Apple’s App Review 
Guidelines.<https://developer.apple.com/app-stoinre/review/guidelines/> Apple 
gives unambiguous direction to developers about what to do, and most important 
in this case, what not to do, if they choose to change business models. Here’s 
what Apple says in their own words.

“If you are changing your existing app to a subscription-based business model, 
you should not take away the primary functionality existing users have already 
paid for. For example, let customers who have already purchased a “full game 
unlock” continue to access the full game after you introduce a subscription 
model for new customers.”

There is no wiggle room here. By taking away primary functionality users 
already paid for, such as adding new material to the Library, Voice Dream 
Reader does not comply with the Guidelines.

How to do it right

If you’re connected to social media and monitor the mobile app scene, you’ll 
know that when any company moves from a one-off purchase to a subscription 
model, they are going to get some hostile reactions. Two apps I recall making 
such a move in recent times are the word processor called Ulysses, and the 
calendar app called Fantastical. Did those apps comply with Apple’s 
requirements?

Ulysses removed the old, one-off purchase app from sale, but it remained in the 
App Store for people who had purchased it. It was even maintained. This was 
seven years ago, so I don’t know if existing one-time purchase customers are 
still able to use the app given that operating systems evolve and can implement 
new features that cause third-party apps to break. The fact remains though that 
Ulysses customers, at the time of the transition, did not lose any of the 
functionality they bought. If customers wanted the shiny new features, then 
quite reasonably they had to subscribe.

Fantastical transitioned to a subscription model in 2020. Again, those who had 
bought the app retained all the features they already had. There were even a 
few more thrown in. This generated goodwill, and for some, the new features 
being offered in the new subscription were compelling enough that people 
upgraded.

Who knows whether these companies would have done this because it’s the decent 
thing, but I am sure they did it because it’s an Apple requirement. It is 
there, as clear as day, in Apple’s Guidelines.

Voice Dream Reader’s release notes make no mention of the subscription being 
forced on people who paid for the app already if they want to retain the 
functionality they paid for, and I suspect this has simply flown under Apple’s 
radar.

Even if you intend supporting the app by paying a subscription as I do, there 
is a moral issue here, as well as the need to speak up for those people who 
can’t afford to subscribe right now and should not have their app rendered 
useless.

What you can do

I encourage everyone to do two things.

First, contact Voice Dream Support and respectfully request that they comply 
with Apple’s App Review Guidelines. They agreed to do so when they put the app 
in the Store.

Second, let Apple know what is going on. The Guideline relating to how to 
handle a change to a subscription model is put there unequivocally to protect 
us, the consumer. We need Apple to step up and enforce the Guideline.

There are a couple of ways to alert Apple. Unfortunately, the best way appears 
only to be available to those with a developer account.

If you have one, you can visit the Apple Developer Contact 
page,<https://developer.apple.com/contact> and sign in with your Apple ID. You 
can choose to contact the App Review Team. After doing so, choose Report an 
App. Unfortunately, like many Apple websites, accessibility is not the best, 
but it is useable.

If you do not have an Apple Developer account, there appears to be no perfect 
way to convey your concerns to Apple. The best way I have found is to open the 
App Store, search for Voice Dream Reader, double-tap to bring up the page for 
the app, scroll to Report a Problem, and double-tap. You’ll be taken to a web 
page which will know the app you are reporting. There is not a Guideline 
violation option there, so you will need to choose the option you think most 
closely reflects your concern.

Conclusion

I wish Voice Dream Reder every success for the future. I hope it is around for 
years to come, thriving. The trust-building measures taken by the company 
recently are encouraging, and I’m willing to pay for the next year to see if 
they deliver meaningful, regular updates.

But, they must do the right thing. If they don’t, I feel sure there will be 
some so put off by the mistreatment of existing customers and the breach of the 
Guidelines that they will withhold their subscription.

I close with a message, perhaps even a plea, to Apple. One of the things you 
tout about the walled garden that is the App Store is that you can protect 
consumers. So please, do so now, to help get one of the apps that has won an 
Apple Design Award back on track. If this Guideline violation is allowed to 
occur without reprisals, it will encourage others to do the same.



David Goldfield,
Blindness Assistive Technology Specialist

If you need help using your assistive technology learn about my training 
services by visiting
WWW.ScreenReaderTraining.com<http://www.screenreadertraining.com/>

Am Yisrael Chai
The Nation of Israel Lives!

JAWS Certified, 2022<https://www.freedomscientific.com/Training/Certification/>
NVDA Certified Expert<https://certification.nvaccess.org/>

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