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Apple Wants eBooks in iBooks to Have Age Guidelines by June 2014 Posted: 07 Feb 2014 07:14 AM PST Do you have an educational ebook in the iBookstore? Then you might want to go read the email Apple sent out this week. Apple is making a few changes to their ebookstore over the next few months, and that email advises authors and publishers on Apple’s new requirements. In addition to a new version of iTunes Producer, Apple is also changing the image requirements for Epubs submitted to the iBookstore (I don’t have details, sorry) and they are also asking authors and publishers to update book listings. Apple now wants all “educational” titles to include details about what ages each title was written for. For example, Apple wants authors to clarify whether a title is for teens, 1st graders, middle schoolers, etc. This is all part of Apple’s growing push to get more iPads into schools. As you probably recall, last month Apple expanded iBooks textbooks into a total of 51 countries. And in last August, Apple updated the iTunes TOS to allow pre-teens to open accounts for educational purposes. Apple has sold some 4.5 million iPads to US schools (and an unknown quantity to schools outside the US) but that’s just a start. There are over 50 million K-12 students in the US, and Apple wants schools to The post Apple Wants eBooks in iBooks to Have Age Guidelines by June 2014 appeared first on The Digital Reader. |
FCC Grants Limited, Temporary Accessibility Waiver for Kindle, Kobo eBook Readers Posted: 07 Feb 2014 05:02 AM PST Most ebook ereaders sold in the US are not accessible to the visually impaired, and thanks to a recent decision from the FCC things are going to stay that way for at least the next year. The FCC's Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau granted a waiver on 28 January which allows ereader makers to continue to avoid complying with a federal regulation on accessibility. Back in August 2013, Amazon, Sony, and Kobo filed a petition which asked that their ebook readers be granted an exemption to a new accessibility regulation. They weren’t trying to avoid complying with all regulations, just one which was crafted in 2011. The companies wanted to avoid the requirement that Amazon et al comply with:
This particular regulation (parts A and B of a single rule) requires that makers of “advanced communications services” make sure those services are accessible to the disabled. It’s a generally good idea, and the rule was written broadly enough that it covers everything from ISPs to mobile devices like tablets and some ereaders (ones with Wifi or 3G). Of course, there’s a problem with applying this rule to ebook readers; by the time the regulation was written numerous models available on the US market could not comply. Amazon, Kobo, and B&N all had at least one ebook reader which lacked the sound capability that would clearly be a basic requirement. The basic Kindle, the Kobo Touch, and the Nook Touch were each completely incompatible with the new regulation, putting the device makers in the position of either junking their existing models and investing in new hardware , or requesting an exemption waiver. Given the cost of compliance, and the limited value it would generate, I can understand why they asked for the waiver. And they succeeded – to a limited to degree. The waiver was carefully written so it only covers mobile devices that meet certain criteria. Tablets are excluded, and so are any devices that don’t meet certain limitations:
Those restrictions were spelled out in the original request, and the FCC basically gave Amazon et al the exact waiver they asked for. The FCC shared their reasoning behind this decision. To put it simply, ebook readers might have email and other web functions but they are designed for reading:
It’s worth noting that this is a limited waiver that only affects a single regulation, and does not exempt ebook readers from all accessibility regulations. (For example, libraries and other public institutions are still going to have to buy devices that are accessible to the disabled.) That’s a nuance many missed when this story broke in August 2013. This waiver is going to be in effect until 28 January, at which point it will either be extended or allowed to expire. I would bet money on Amazon et al getting an extension; whatever new ebook readers introduced over the next 11 months won’t be terribly different from the models we can buy today, and I don’t see a reason why the exemption wouldn’t be allowed to stand. image by kodomut The post FCC Grants Limited, Temporary Accessibility Waiver for Kindle, Kobo eBook Readers appeared first on The Digital Reader. |
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