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April 17, 2010

How dumb is your iPad?

ipad%20ibooks.jpg

Here's an annoying quirk in the iPad's e-book function: As you look over books to buy, Apple's iPad offer a helpful description. But for Herman Melville's classic "Moby Dick," the description is oddly censored: "the novel is rooted in two true stories: the 1821 sinking of whaling ship Essex and the killing of an albino s***m whale ..." (Full view at boing boing.) Maybe Apple has contracted out the summaries -- and censorship -- to China?


The prudishness also shows up in Joseph Conrad's "The N****r of the Narcissus." What will they do with the upcoming book by D**k Cheney?


In a related "Apple Protecting Us From Ourselves" matter, a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist says his application for an iPhone app was rejected in December because his cartoons made fun of people. Mark Fiore, a satirist for the San Francisco Chronicle's SFGate.com, has received lots of media attention after noting his problem in an interview with the Nieman Journalism Lab. And that apparently has made Apple reconsider. He has been encouraged to reapply for his app, according to the Nieman site.

Posted by Dave Rosenthal at 12:33 AM | | Comments (2)
        

Comments

This is what happens when you use Apple's walled garden. It is beyond outrageous that Apple has an peach fuzzed geek deciding that a Pulitzer prize winner has no place in their world, until, oops, they are "outed".

Within the i-world, Apple is in charge of EVERYTHING you see and do. Apple cultists see no problem with that and embrace it. I do not.

Apple's app approval policy is arbitrary in the extreme; there's no telling what's acceptable and what isn't before they send a response.

This reminds me of when the Nine Inch Nails iPhone app was turned down because it contained offensive content (the lyrics to all of NIN's songs), yet iTunes sold all of the uncensored songs in the store!

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About the blogger
Dave Rosenthal came to The Baltimore Sun as a business reporter in 1987 and now is the Maryland Editor. He reads a wide range of books (but never as many as he'd like), usually alternating between non-fiction and fiction. Some all-time favorites: A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole; Wind, Sand and Stars by Antoine de Saint-Exupery; and anything by Calvin Trillin or John McPhee. He belongs to a book club with a Jewish theme.
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