The Sword and Laser discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
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Not a rant but an open letter to understanding.
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message 1:
by
Nick
(new)
Apr 19, 2012 09:02AM

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a) the publisher didn't allow selling the copy to your region or,
b) Audible doesn't sell to your region.


It looks like Audible just isn't set up to fine grain checking what region you're from or their erring on the side of caution and only selling to regions where the publisher has an exclusive right.
It's also possible that the publishers don't have rights in your region, but iTunes feels it can ignore this because Apple has a better relationship with publishers than Amazon does.
It's incredibly frustrating that there's no decent competition to audible that might make them get their ass in gear.

Actually, Apple can't violate rates either. The only thing iTunes sells to us here in the Philippines actually are just Apps. Not videos, not books, not music.
It's probably a retailer limitation, but if you're able to buy other products from Audible, then it's a publisher-set restriction.

I took a trip back to visit my family in the US, and while I was there, I tried again to buy something I wanted, and it still didn't show up when I searched! So I contacted audible's customer service, saying that I'd been living in Korea but was currently in the US and wanted to buy some audiobooks but they were showing as unavailable. The customer service rep changed something in my account to show that I was in the US, and then I could buy everything I wanted.
They were having a sale on series at the time, and I took advantage to buy a gajillion books while I was in the US. When I returned to South Korea, I expected it to go back to not finding things I wanted, but it never did! Either I've happened only to search for things that are available here, or when he changed the setting, it didn't change back after I returned to Korea. I haven't looked too closely into it, because I don't want to attract attention if I'm not supposed to be able to get them, but...maybe something similar could work for you, if you have a friend in the US or UK who could contact customer service from a US or UK IP address, (or you, via tunneling).