3

pulse Here’s an odd reversal. We’ve written a number of times about Apple pulling or rejecting apps from its store for fairly shaky reasons, but yesterday a story broke about Apple actually standing up for an app when the New York Times wanted it pulled down.

The app in question is Pulse, an iPad RSS feed reader that has been getting good reviews, both at our sister blog Appletell and elsewhere. Steve Jobs praised it at WWDC yesterday, and even the New York Times itself gave it a glowing review.

But apparently someone in the New York Times legal department objected to the fact that Pulse, a commercial app which costs $4.99, features the New York Times RSS feed as one of its defaults, and also didn’t like the way Pulse handled links to articles (though it’s not all that different from how other RSS readers such as Google Reader handle them). They asked that the app be pulled, and Apple briefly did so.

The app’s developers uploaded a new version of the app with the New York Times removed from the default feeds…but then Apple reinstated the original version of the app, with the New York Times included, just a few hours later.

It’s kind of like the Murdoch vs. news aggregators thing all over again—each side thinking the other is getting the better end of the deal. It remains to be seen whether the New York Times will press its objection, or object to other RSS readers on the same grounds.

 
3