So at first I thought Apple had managed to undo the whole nonsense that book publishers strong-armed Amazon into doing where they can turn off TTS narration to make you buy the audiobook. But instead this seems to just be "hey if you want to use TTS instead of a paid narrator, you can". Already kinda shitty, but there's extra shit cherries on top: the resulting recording cannot be used on other book platforms. Only Apple Books and the DRM nonsense that killed public libraries.
So it's also platform capitalist moat building, too - i.e. a scheme to deprive Amazon Audible of audiobooks. The more publishers opt to use Apple Books digital narration instead of paying a narrator, the less audiobooks will be available on Audible. And yes, you are allowed to still pay a narrator and distribute that recording on Audible, but... if you could do that, then obviously you wouldn't bother with Apple's TTS system.
Of course, the flipside of this is that Amazon refuses to bother with copyright enforcement for books not on Audible. Cory Doctorow found this out the hard way[0]. If you do not license your work to Amazon, Amazon will pay someone else to copy it, and for some reason DMCA 512 protects them[1]. So I can see this winding up being a functionally unused service anyway.
[1] To be clear, I do not oppose DMCA 512; I just don't think DRM-bearing audiobook services that charge money should be allowed to disclaim copyright liability. DMCA 512 and 1201 should be mutually exclusive.
So it's also platform capitalist moat building, too - i.e. a scheme to deprive Amazon Audible of audiobooks. The more publishers opt to use Apple Books digital narration instead of paying a narrator, the less audiobooks will be available on Audible. And yes, you are allowed to still pay a narrator and distribute that recording on Audible, but... if you could do that, then obviously you wouldn't bother with Apple's TTS system.
Of course, the flipside of this is that Amazon refuses to bother with copyright enforcement for books not on Audible. Cory Doctorow found this out the hard way[0]. If you do not license your work to Amazon, Amazon will pay someone else to copy it, and for some reason DMCA 512 protects them[1]. So I can see this winding up being a functionally unused service anyway.
[0] https://www.audible.com/pd/Why-None-of-My-Books-Are-Availabl...
[1] To be clear, I do not oppose DMCA 512; I just don't think DRM-bearing audiobook services that charge money should be allowed to disclaim copyright liability. DMCA 512 and 1201 should be mutually exclusive.