How do I change iBooks region to access book Apple recommended?

I am American studying in Japan, everything set to English except Region was Japan during computer installation (changing this to United States in Settings did not resolve the problem): At the end of the MacBook Pro tour Apple recommended this iBook, but then tells me in iBooks 1.13 (1458) that it's not available in the Japanese store! What a design flaw! How embarrassing, for Apple to recommend a book and then not let the user access it!


Others complained about this as recent as last year but that thread was locked without resolution. Can anything be done, or are there internal barriers locking Apple in a 19th century mentality regarding stores?

MacBook Pro TouchBar and Touch ID, macOS High Sierra (10.13.3), purchased in Japan

Posted on Feb 19, 2018 5:56 PM

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19 replies

Feb 19, 2018 11:46 PM in response to ethereality

To use another country's store you have to be in that country and have a billing address in that country on your account - content providers understandably want control over how and where their content is available, each country therefore has to have its own store and you have to be in a country to use its store. Try contacting the publisher/rights-holder and ask them to put the book in the Japan iBookstore.

Feb 25, 2018 1:51 AM in response to ethereality

Yes you should. Content is licensed to Apple to sell (including free items) on a country-by-country basis, each country therefore has to have its own store and you have to be in a country with a billing address in that country to use its store - a book could have different rights-holders for different countries. Contact the publisher/rights-holder and ask them to put the book in the Japan store

Feb 25, 2018 4:25 PM in response to King_Penguin

King_Penguin wrote:


Content is licensed to Apple to sell (including free items) on a country-by-country basis, each country therefore has to have its own store and you have to be in a country with a billing address in that country to use its store

This strikes me as a non sequitur -- consider stores at airports. They don't require that. Likewise, use of a VISA card. This is the 21st century, where people reside in different countries for different periods of time. It's simply foolish and archaic to insist on a billing address in the same country you're trying to get something in. It's especially foolish if the item is free. Apple should fix these design flaws. I have contacted them with 'feedback' as Idris recommended. Please join me in doing so.

Feb 25, 2018 6:14 PM in response to ethereality

ethereality wrote:


This strikes me as a non sequitur -- consider stores at airports. They don't require that. Likewise, use of a VISA card. This is the 21st century, where people reside in different countries for different periods of time. It's simply foolish and archaic to insist on a billing address in the same country you're trying to get something in. It's especially foolish if the item is free. Apple should fix these design flaws. I have contacted them with 'feedback' as Idris recommended. Please join me in doing so.

It's not a "design flaw" that Apple can fix. Apple has to follow copyright laws. Digital goods are, in some ways, more tightly controlled than their analog counterparts. You're buying the book in the airport shop. Anything you download from the iBook Store, you are licensing, not buying. It may seem like a distinction without a difference but, from a legal standpoint, it's quite different. You can legally sell or give away that book. You can't do that with books from the iBook Store.

Feb 28, 2018 6:11 AM in response to IdrisSeabright

It was purchased in Japan, by a Japanese vendor, and the installation already detected 'Japan' on the first setup screen. So it appears Apple has no excuse to proffer a US iBook to me during the introductory tour, that it's simply an oversight that they should correct: "He set the language to US English (or his Apple ID was established on a US computer prior to being signed in on this one), so he must be in the US." Again, this is the 21st century; they should recognize that people travel and work in different countries now.

Feb 27, 2018 11:26 PM in response to ethereality

ethereality wrote:


It's a design flaw to offer a book to someone they know isn't able to access it. I already told them I was in Japan, so they should have taken that into account in their introductory materials.

Well, I know it was difficult to deal with, but at least you weren't dying of thirst or hunger. It's certainly a difficult situation for you, but with perseverance, you will undoubtedly be as lucky as those survivors of mass shootings and barrel bombs. Hang in there - you will beat this thing....


GB

Feb 28, 2018 6:26 AM in response to ethereality

ethereality wrote:


It was purchased in Japan, by a Japanese vendor, and the installation already detected 'Japan' on the first setup screen. So it appears Apple has no excuse to proffer a US iBook to me during the introductory tour, that it's simply an oversight that they should correct: "He set the language to US English (or his Apple ID was established on a US computer prior to being signed in on this one), so he must be in the US." Again, this is the 21st century; they should recognize that people travel and work in different countries now.

Seriously, is this really that big a issue?

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How do I change iBooks region to access book Apple recommended?

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