Major news publishers association joins the Coalition for App Fairness
A trade association representing major U.S. news publishers has joined the Coalition for App Fairness, the group known for criticizing Apple's App Store policies.

Credit: Coalition for App Fairness
Digital Context Next, which represents media outlets like The New York Times, The Associated Press, The Washington Post, and NPR, joined the Coalition for App Fairness as its 50th member and the first group to represent the news and media industry.
In a statement, DCN said it is "pleased to join the Coalition for App Fairness working to establish a fair and competitive digital landscape."
"The premium publisher members of DCN enjoy trusted, direct relationships with consumers, who don't expect intermediaries to impose arbitrary fees and rules which limit their ability to consume the news and entertainment they love," said DCN CEO Jason Kint.
Although the first U.S. media trade association to become a member of the coalition, the DCN joins other media organizations already a part of the group -- including the European Publishers Council and News Media Europe.
The coalition calls for fair treatment on app stores and increased regulations on app marketplaces. It takes particular issue with alleged anti-competitive behavior on the App Store and payment systems like Apple's 30% cut of in-app purchases.
Among other members, the Coalition for App Fairness includes developers like Spotify, Basecamp, and "Fortnite" maker Epic Games -- all of whom have had their own dustups with the Cupertino tech giant in the past.
News publishers have also pushed back against some of Apple's App Store policies, including its commission rate. In August, DCN reached out to Apple CEO Tim Cook and asked it to reduce its 30% cut.
Some of Apple's app store policies have also received criticism from lawmakers and government entities. A U.S. House investigation found that Apple enjoys "monopoly power" on the App Store, and the European Union is currently in the midst of its own antitrust probe.
Likely spurred by the scrutiny, Apple in November introduced a new small business program that cuts the company's commission to 15% for developers making less than $1 million through the App Store. In June, Apple also changed some of its App Store guidelines to make it easier for developers to file appeals.

Credit: Coalition for App Fairness
Digital Context Next, which represents media outlets like The New York Times, The Associated Press, The Washington Post, and NPR, joined the Coalition for App Fairness as its 50th member and the first group to represent the news and media industry.
In a statement, DCN said it is "pleased to join the Coalition for App Fairness working to establish a fair and competitive digital landscape."
"The premium publisher members of DCN enjoy trusted, direct relationships with consumers, who don't expect intermediaries to impose arbitrary fees and rules which limit their ability to consume the news and entertainment they love," said DCN CEO Jason Kint.
Although the first U.S. media trade association to become a member of the coalition, the DCN joins other media organizations already a part of the group -- including the European Publishers Council and News Media Europe.
The coalition calls for fair treatment on app stores and increased regulations on app marketplaces. It takes particular issue with alleged anti-competitive behavior on the App Store and payment systems like Apple's 30% cut of in-app purchases.
Among other members, the Coalition for App Fairness includes developers like Spotify, Basecamp, and "Fortnite" maker Epic Games -- all of whom have had their own dustups with the Cupertino tech giant in the past.
News publishers have also pushed back against some of Apple's App Store policies, including its commission rate. In August, DCN reached out to Apple CEO Tim Cook and asked it to reduce its 30% cut.
Some of Apple's app store policies have also received criticism from lawmakers and government entities. A U.S. House investigation found that Apple enjoys "monopoly power" on the App Store, and the European Union is currently in the midst of its own antitrust probe.
Likely spurred by the scrutiny, Apple in November introduced a new small business program that cuts the company's commission to 15% for developers making less than $1 million through the App Store. In June, Apple also changed some of its App Store guidelines to make it easier for developers to file appeals.
Comments
So finally one company gets it - Apple. They seem to be the ONLY company that respects my privacy. Now they are worth a trillion dollars - or two. A lot of that value comes from the fact that Apple respects our privacy and people buy into them because of that. And now we're going to punish Apple for being the only company to give us what we want to buy?
If these newspapers want my money without me going through a trusted third party, maybe they should create their own trusted third party who will not give my personal details and email address to anyone. If they did that, they could persuade me to buy through them instead of Apple. But they won't do that because at a fundamental level they do NOT respect my privacy and want me to give up my privacy and my money. Not going to happen.
Would be great to see a full page ad in a big paper with the views commonly espoused by, for example, people in this forum instead of the one-sided (big money) view only on these issues.
So, it's critically important that they track who reads them because that is the only way they know to send you ads and news that will hook you in.
I think this is attributed to Mark Twain: "If you don't read the papers, you're uninformed. If you read the papers, you're misinformed."
And, these are the reputable papers, not Fox, or Alex Jones, etc.
The latest outrage was the report of a couple of medical workers, with severe allergies, who got the Pfizer vaccine and suffered an anaphylactoid response. American newspaper went ape over this -- which is absolutely nothing that isn't expected by medical professionals and they are always wholly prepared for. It only required the news to inform the public that this not unusual response occurred and it was to be expected in some cases such as these patients. Instead they made a routine medical occurrence a headline.
These "reputable papers" are a joke.
That bit of “news” was given way more airtime than it warranted for. And that’s just because there was nothing there! Big nothingburger as far as anyone credible could see.
We don’t have to jump all the hoops every time a right wing nut yanks a “story” out of their butt, just so other nuts feel that all is fair and balanced. That’s called feeding the trolls!
The Politico newspapers is gaining incredible influence and lobbying power in Brussel, dictating in the European edition, whats good for EU and what not.
Are you the puppet player Politico?