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On 02/19/2011 11:39 PM, Richard Pieri wrote: > On Feb 19, 2011, at 11:00 PM, David Kramer wrote: >> >> Uhm, no. From what I understand, any company that tries to work >> around this policy by charging through content delivered to the IOS >> device through other means won't get their app approved. If it was >> a choice, the developers wouldn't be so mad. > > This is exactly why Sony's Reader app was rejected. > > It isn't developers in general who are angry about this. It's Big > Content, the ones who already have their own locked-down stores and > distribution channels, who see Apple's rules as the direct threat to > their business models that they are. And incidentally streaming > radio outfits like Last.fm and Pandora who may be getting shafted > accidentally. I am interested in how this does play out for their > sakes. Sony can die in a fire for all I care, but Pandora and > Last.fm don't deserve to be casualties in this. Yes, Sony can drown in a mountain of malware-infected MemoryStick Pros and MiniDiscs. But not all Big Content is evil.
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