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nytipad Dan Gillmor at Mediactive raises an interesting question of ethics in his look at the New York Times’s dealings with Apple.

Apple has been featuring the Times very prominently on the iPad page on its website, brought out a Times exec at the iPad launch back in January, and in fact Apple and the Times have been getting very cozy with each other in general.

It makes sense: Apple wants big media franchises to appear on its iPad to drive the device’s sales, while the Times is trying everything it can to monetize itself as ad revenues fall. (For instance, the recent announcement it was going to raise its electronic subscription prices to $19.99.)

What Gillmor wonders is whether the Times paid Apple for its prominent placement, and more importantly whether there is a conflict of interest here—and why the New York Times hasn’t attempted to address it.

What matters is the Times’ seeming indifference to the way this looks. Even though I don’t believe there was any quid pro quo, I do believe that someone who doesn’t know the players could reasonably ask if an arrangement did exist.

Another question Gillmor is asking that no one seems to be answering is whether Apple could remove the New York Times’s (and other media organizations’) e-reading apps if those media organizations say something Apple doesn’t like.

Gillmor has severe reservations about news organizations becoming so close to a company that has had such a history of restrictive practices as Apple—forcing publications to change or remove material it considered inappropriate (we covered one novelist being forced to remove the “f-word” from his encapsulated e-book app at Apple’s behest), and attacking journalists in a number of ways.

Again, Apple has every right to push around its customers and media “partners” in pursuit of its business goals. What bothers me is the media companies’ willingness to cede so much of their authority to a company that has demonstrated its willingness to abuse it.

I think Gillmor makes some good points. Not just the Times but a number of other media organizations have been cozying up to Apple. As I mentioned the other day, Rupert Murdoch seems to think the iPad will “save” publishing. The question is, how are these organizations going to be able to report objectively on the actions of their “savior”?

(Found via BoingBoing.)

 
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