Apple users: Did you know that you can't buy Kindle books from the Kindle app on your iOS device? In fact, you can't purchase them from the Amazon app either.
Even if you're an Amazon Prime member and you want to download a free book. Nah, not possible.
This may not be news to you if you've tried to buy Kindle books from either application over the last 6+ years, but this recently came up again as an obstacle to a few family members and friends, so we thought it was still worth sharing the workaround. Granted, we can file this one under better late than never, but coverage seems warranted considering the fact that the issue has persisted for so long and isn't looking to be resolved in the immediate future.
The matter dates all the way back to an App Store policy update in early 2011, a time when the late Steve Jobs was still CEO and the company's App Store was only a few years old. The App Store was introduced in July 2008 with the release of "iPhone OS 2.0".
Apple has been criticized from day one over the rules governing its App Store, which enforces various content restrictions and manual reviews of software submitted to the marketplace, in addition to (and more controversially) taking a 30% cut of revenue from apps sold through the Store.
In February 2011, the company announced something of an expansion to that policy along with introducing a new subscription service that gave iOS users a centralized location to manage subscriptions for content-based apps such as newspapers, magazines, music and videos.
The new service essentially gave iOS users a one-stop-shop for subscriptions, and in exchange for greasing the skids and processing the payments, Apple wrote itself in for a 30% share of revenue from digital content sold over iOS devices.
"Our philosophy is simple – when Apple brings a new subscriber to the app, Apple earns a 30% share," Jobs said in the 2011 press release. "All we require is that, if a publisher is making a subscription offer outside of the app, the same (or better) offer be made inside the app, so that customers can easily subscribe with one-click right in the app."
Being forced to price-match in-app sales while paying Apple's 30% commission proved challenging for many businesses. Compounding the bad news, the same press release announced that apps would no longer be able to provide links bringing users outside of apps for transactions, which previously helped developers sidestep Apple's policy and its tax.
In an interview shortly after Apple unveiled the new App Store rules in 2011, Rhapsody president Jon Irwin explained that the new rules strained his company's business model: "Apple's 30% will exceed the revenue on our product...It's not a matter of making less money, it would be zero profit."
The updated policy had anti-competitive leanings to say the least, essentially forcing rival distributors of music, ebooks and so on to compete with Apple on pricing for digital goods while simultaneously having to pay Apple a 30% royalty on those sales.
Within a month, Apple eased its new policy by allowing developers to price their wares differently on the App Store, though given the 30% commission and ban on external links, this change didn't improve circumstances for many companies and products.
Such has been the case all these years for Amazon's Kindle books, which again, can't be purchased through either the Kindle or Amazon apps on iOS, even if you have Amazon Prime, and even if it lets you download a sample, from which you still won't be able to buy the book.
The workaround? Use Safari or Chrome mobile web browser and use Amazon.com to complete your purchase. Then go back to the app. While companies cannot provide external links to direct sales within apps, you can manually navigate to external sales with a web browser.
That's precisely what you'll have to do to purchase Kindle ebooks (or download free books) on your iPhone or iPad. After buying them in a browser, they'll be synced to your account and then you can access them inside the Kindle app.
Apple's now 7 year old policy emphasizes profit over functionality, but given the closed ecosystem's level of success, it's not surprising this remains an issue all these years later.
Previous:Shrinking the President
The Duration of 'Vexations'Playboy drops sex toy line with shop LoversDuchamp’s Last Riddle by Jillian SteinhauerToddlers and Turtles: The 8 best and funniest tweets of the weekDuchamp’s Last Riddle by Jillian SteinhauerPlayboy drops sex toy line with shop LoversMcCarthy as Sisyphus: The 11 best tweets about the House Speaker vote debacleSurvival Story: An Interview with David France by Garth GreenwellLittle Red and Big Bad, FinaleBryan Lee O'Malley on the death of Scott Pilgrim'Fallen Leaves' review: Finding love in a hopeless placeiPad (10th gen) deal: $349 at AmazonNYT's The Mini crossword answers for November 17How to watch KU vs. KChatGPT essays and more: How teachers and schools are dealing with AI writingThe Art of Memory by Presca AhnBest Meta Quest 2 deal: Get the Meta Quest 2 for just $249 at AmazonJohn H. Johnson and the Black Magazine by Dick GregoryThelonious Monk and MeInstagram is here to stay. So people are changing how they use it. TikTok and Universal Music reach a deal, restoring artists to platform Elon Musk tweets a pic of 60 satellites, the first for SpaceX Starlink Rublev vs. Alcaraz 2024 livestream: Watch Madrid Open for free Get up to 30% off Sceptre and ASUS gaming monitors at Amazon Digital torchbearer to perform at closing ceremony of 19th Asian Games · TechNode US government restricts 42 Chinese enterprises over alleged support for Russia · TechNode Porn apps disguised as learning apps on China’s iOS App Store · TechNode What a year in space did to Scott Kelly's body: NASA's study is out HoYoverse fails in attempts to bypass App Store’s 30% "Apple Tax" · TechNode Baidu set to launch ERNIE model iteration next week: report · TechNode ChatGPT now saves chat history even if you've opted out of sharing training data NYT's The Mini crossword answers for May 2 A parent's guide to Skibidi Toilet: What is it and why is it so popular? Do you need a VPN on your phone? China's eight Big UN extinction crisis report paints grim future for life on Earth Xiaomi's self The Thanos snap for real: Let's remove humans from half of Earth Tencent Music partners with Qualcomm to launch AI Live Nation Concert Week 2024: How to snag $25 tickets
2.3887s , 10130.5546875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Taste of Secret Sex】,Steady Information Network