Don't people have better things to do? Apple could just as easily argue that they are displaying a version of the homepage that doesn't use flash — there are other plausible explanations for how interactive elements or video are displayed. For this to qualify as deceptive in any substantial way, Apple would need to be strongly implying that it is Flash in particular that is allowing the display of these particular features. Secondly the presence or absence of Flash needs to be demonstrated as a factor in the purchase of the iPad. That frankly is a load of bully. Most people don't care either way. _Most_ being the operative word.
Except you can find out that the actual nytimes.com site does use Flash (it was even obvious in the real life demo by Jobs). You can probably even find a copy of the HTML from the time that Apple cut the video, proving that they faked it. Screen images in videos like that are usually simulated, this isn't a huge surprise. They should have just used a site that didn't use Flash.
My argument still stands. This is only matters if you can argue that substantial numbers of people say "OMG it has Flash, _now_ definitely want one".
The question is one of intent. Did they want to intentionally want to make people believe the iPad has flash, or did they just want to have the NYT site look good/un-broken in the ad?
This complaint is making a mountain out of a molehill.
Huh? I thought it was just the opposite- the site had "missing plugin" icons all over the place. My feeling was that Jobs did this very much on purpose, so that the Times would think about dumping Flash.
The complaint is in reply to the promo video, not the keynote (though the video was played at the keynote). You saw the missing plugin icons while Steve Jobs went to the NYTimes, not during the video.