Top News:
BBC:
Times website to charge from June — The Times and Sunday Times newspapers will start charging to access their websites in June, owner News International (NI) has announced. — Users will pay £1 for a day's access and £2 for a week's subscription.
Discussion:
Mediaite, The Wrap, paidContent, Guardian, Media Decoder, Techdirt, NPR Blogs, themediablog.typepad.com, FishBowlNY, Media Week, Channel 4, Press Gazette, TechRadar.com, Sky News, Journalism.co.uk, One Man & His Blog, Jon Slattery, Freelance Unbound, industry.bnet.com, THINQ.co.uk and John Rentoul
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Jennifer Howze / Times of London:
The Times and Sunday Times websites to charge from June — Alexi Mostrous, Media Editor, and Francesca Steele — The Times and The Sunday Times will start charging for their websites from June, it was confirmed today. — News International, the newspapers' parent company …
Addy Dugdale / Fast Company:
Editor of The Times Goes Online to Answer (Not Very Many) Questions on Impending Paywall — Following on from this morning's news that two of Rupert Murdoch's British newspapers are to start charging, James Harding, editor of The Times, braved the Intertubes for a Q&A with his readers.
Scott Rosenberg / Scott Rosenberg's Wordyard:
For the media biz, iPad 2010 = CDROM 1994 — I'm having flashbacks these days, and they're not from drugs, they're from the rising chorus of media-industry froth about how Apple's forthcoming iPad is going to save the business of selling content. — Let me be clear: I love what I've seen …
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Ryan Tate / Gawker:
How Apple Is Dogfighting To Control Your News — Apple's iPad could make it the king of old media, arbiter of taste and technology alike. So magazines and newspapers have begun a series of countermoves that could turn the quietest dogfight in media into the most vicious.
Derek Thompson / The Atlantic Online:
What the WSJ's iPad Price Says About the iPad — The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday that it will set monthly iPad subscriptions as $17.99. This is what we in the biz know as cojones. I looked up WSJ subscriptions for Web and print today. It turns out that getting the WSJ …
Cglynch / The Lynch Blog:
What The Reader Elite Means for Journalism Schools — In the wake of my last post about The Reader Elite, I had several discussions with friends in the media industry about what such an audience would mean for journalism as an academic concentration. The Reader Elite is what I call the group …
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Ravi Somaiya / Gawker:
Journalism Schools May Die. Good. — A shrinking pool of journalists may mean the death of J-schools. Good. Fusty academia, pointless courses on ‘new media’ and endless essay-masturbation over ethics is pointless anyway. — Learning journalism in a classroom feeds the idea …
Discussion:
Romenesko
Nikki Finke / Deadline.com:
Here's The Hollywood Reporter Offer To Me — As you know, I responded early yesterday to some inaccurate showbiz website's rumor-mongering. I revealed that, in early December, the new owners of The Hollywood Reporter approached me about becoming editor-in-chief.
RELATED:
Boston Globe:
Guild protests NY Times execs compensation — The Boston Newspaper Guild, which is the biggest employee union at The Boston Globe, is circulating a petition that asks its members to sign a letter to protest the compensation packages of the two top executives at The New York Times Co., the Globe's owner.
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Sam Schechner / Wall Street Journal:
CW to Double Ads in Web Shows — Seeking to mine a growing audience for TV shows online, The CW Network is taking a route that other broadcasters have avoided: putting as many ads in Web versions of its shows as it airs on TV. — The U.S. network, a joint venture of CBS Corp. and Time Warner Inc. …
Mercedes Bunz / Guardian:
News Corp's UK titles to pull out of Nexis — News Corp withdraws its content from news aggregator Nexis, but it will remain on the Murdoch-owned Factiva — News International is to pull its content for all their UK titles from the aggregation and archive service Nexis …
Kristen Schweizer / Bloomberg:
Spotify Online Music Site Targets U.S. Start in Third Quarter — Spotify, a virtual digital jukebox and Europe's largest legal online music site, aims to start U.S. operations in the third quarter. — The Stockholm-based company, which has 7 million users in Europe, is in talks …
Discussion:
Fast Company, Epicenter, GigaOM, Silicon Alley Insider, Lifehacker, Mashable!, Gizmodo, ReadWriteWeb and New York Magazine
Big Think:
Design of the Times: Khoi Vinh and NYT.com — Why does the Web version of a newspaper look so different from the print version? It may sound like a simple-minded question, but the answer cuts to the heart of the difference between the print and the online experience.