If you are using the [iTunes Connect][1] service to sell your music, books, ads, applications, etc. and are struggling with how the service works, or don't get how Apple's publicly documented services work in real-life, [Ask Different][2] would like the chance to host your questions and answers.

We of course generally close questions that fail to follow the norms of being objective (or good-subjective), well researched, properly documented, or reasonably scoped.

There are some areas where we don't want to field questions:

* Questions that cover pre-release, [NDA][3]-only topics were and continue to be [off-topic for Ask Different][4].
* Code level questions are better suited to Stack Overflow and will generally be closed or evaluated for migration as appropriate.
* Things that are clearly op-ed pieces about how [awesome|sucky|ridiculous|shortsighted|wise|whatever] Apple's policies are. Those topics will be steered to the blog and chat rooms by closing posts solely about Apple's actions. This is no different than other questions on the site that ask how Apple works rather than asking how to use Apple products. 

I can see how "code-level" might be confusing to some, so I'll elaborate on that line in hopes of clarifying our intent.

If you are an iOS or Mac developer and code signing (using [Xcode][5], scripts, or the `codesign` command line tool) is kicking your workflow to the curb - ask that detailed question on Stack Overflow. 

If you are an iOS or Mac developer and wonder how code signing might affect your customers in different countries or a user wondering how to tell if an app is code signed (even if you are using the `codesign` tool from the command line), you might ask that on Ask Different since it's more of a user level / policy question than an implementation detail.

  [1]: http://www.apple.com/itunes/sellcontent/
  [2]: https://apple.stackexchange.com/tour
  [3]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-disclosure_agreement
  [4]: https://apple.stackexchange.com/faq
  [5]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xcode