A Call for Transparency in Apple's App Store

Image may contain Office Building Building Human Person Urban Town City High Rise Condo Housing and Metropolis

ipadrelease0091

The iTunes App Store is nearly two years old, and Apple still has not published a clear set of guidelines about what type of content is and isn’t allowed inside apps. That’s a problem, especially for publishers eyeing the iPad as a potential platform for the future of publishing, and it’s an even bigger problem for readers.

We in the press don’t know to what extent we can retain our editorial freedom in the App Store. Working with Apple’s current opaque policy, we’re left to trust that Apple will do the right thing. And time and time again, Apple’s App Store reviewers have been proven fallible, as recently shown by the rejection of Mark Fiore’s Pulitzer-winning cartoon. Apple rejected the toon because it “ridicules public figures,” and after coming under fire in the press, the company approved the app. But in reversing its decision, Apple still did not make its content policy clear.

Instead, the Fiore episode raised more questions. Does it mean we can now publish satire? Or does it mean we have to win a Pulitzer in order to publish satire? Or does it mean we have to stir up negative press in order to publish satire?

The fact there are so many questions points to a paramount concern: Readers don’t know what they could be missing when they’re reading the iPad edition of a publication, as opposed to its print or web version.

The issue is poised to grow as more iPads sell. To understand, you have to consider the logistics of embracing a new publishing medium such as the iPad. Media operations must integrate digital tablet production into their infrastructure, and it’s neither easy nor inexpensive to obtain the software developers, designers and content creators to make such a transition. And if advertisers invest more money in the iPad version of a publication, that pressures publishers to give priority to resources allocated to the iPad.

Given Apple’s lead in mobile, the rate at which Apple and the App Store are growing and the wild enthusiasm among advertisers lining up for the iPad opportunity, it seems inevitable that Apple will to some extent have influence over the content that publishers produce.

Tech observers have correctly compared the App Store to Walmart, which refuses to sell musical albums carrying the Parental Advisory tag. Walmart has even suggested that artists change lyrics and CD covers it deems objectionable. Given the retail chain’s position as the world’s largest music retailer, many agree Walmart has altered the way the recording industry creates albums.

The major difference between the App Store and Walmart, however, is that the RIAA has published details about the Parental Advisory program. Apple has not published such documents regarding content for apps.

Following the Fiore incident, the journalism industry is slowly waking up to my forewarning published in February about the potential for Apple to take control of the press. The Association of American Editorial Cartoons published a letter on April 22 asking for Apple to support free speech.

“The Association of American Editorial Cartoonists calls on Apple to immediately stop rejecting apps because they ‘ridicule public figures’ and are deemed ‘objectionable,'” the association wrote. “Now is the time for Apple to welcome a vibrant and diverse world of news and opinion with open arms.”

Columbia Journalism Review’s Ryan Chittum expressed his concerns about the rejection in his editorial “It’s time for the press to push back against Apple.

“If the press is ceding gatekeeper status, even if it’s only nominally, over its speech, then it is making a dangerous mistake,” wrote Chittum. He makes an extreme suggestion: Yank apps from the store until Apple agrees to give publishers complete control over their content.

I partly disagree: A strong argument for Apple’s tight control is the level of quality and protection provided by its App Store — an experience many customers enjoy. My position is more moderate: It’s OK for there to be rules required for us to play in the App Store. It’s just not OK that publications and their readers don’t know what the rules are. As advocates of transparency, we in the press should demand transparency from our new partner, Apple.

Make no mistake, though written from the perspective of a Wired writer, this editorial doesn’t just concern the press. Everybody participating in the App Store is a part of “new media” and should be demanding that Apple come clean with its rules.

If there’s anything valuable we can extract from South Park ‘s last-minute censorship of Mohammed in response to a death threat from a Muslim website, it’s that capricious censorship bears unexpected consequences. Similar can be said about Apple. In a creative platform like the App Store, when censorship is imposed without making clear what the rules for censorship are, the natural reaction for eager participants is to over-censor themselves so as not to be punished. That’s bad for innovation and democracy, and the detrimental side effect is widespread conformity — ironic, coming from a company whose former slogan was “Think Different.”

Brian X. Chen is writing a book examining the positive and negative implications of the iPhone revolution, scheduled to publish Spring 2011 by Perseus Books Group.

Updated 7:30 a.m. PT: Posted a link to the letter published by the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists.

See Also:

Photo: Bryan Derballa/Wired.com