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3:45 PM ET, June 10, 2010

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Gawker:
Apple's Worst Security Breach: 114,000 iPad Owners Exposed  —  Apple has suffered another embarrassment.  A security breach has exposed iPad owners including dozens of CEOs, military officials, and top politicians.  They—and every other buyer of the wireless-enabled tablet—could be vulnerable to spam marketing and malicious hacking.
RELATED:
Taylor Buley / The Firewall:
AT&T's iPad Hackers ‘Ignored’ By Reuters, Other Mainstream Press  —  Gawker contributor Ryan Tate set the Web ablaze on Wednesday with a blog post detailing the alleged breach of 114,000 iPad users' email addresses.  The post named names: among them, executives at News Corp, The New York Times Company and Dow Jones.
Choire / The Awl:
‘New York Times’ Bans the Word ‘Tweet’  —  Phil Corbett, the latest standards editor at the Times (maybe the greatest job in the world?), has issued a proclamation!  Yesterday, the following memo went out, asking writers to abstain from the invented past-tense and other weird iterations of the magical noun-verb “Twitter.”
Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
BP and Officials Block Some Coverage of Gulf Oil Spill  —  When the operators of Southern Seaplane in Belle Chasse, La., called the local Coast Guard-Federal Aviation Administration command center for permission to fly over restricted airspace in Gulf of Mexico, they made what they thought was a simple and routine request.
Staci D. Kramer / paidContent:
Interview: Part 2: Dow Jones' Les Hinton & Robert Thomson On WSJ Digital  —  The Wall Street Journal was a poster child for premium subscriptions long before Rupert Murdoch's News Corp (NSDQ: NWS) bought out the Bancroft family.  But the digital landscape has changed dramatically since then.
Discussion: rbr.com and FishbowlNY
RELATED:
Staci D. Kramer / paidContent:
Read This Dow Jones Reply To A Licensing Request—And Weep
Discussion: Nieman Journalism Lab
Penelope Green / New York Times:
Currents |  Q&A: A Look Back From Departing Architectural Digest Editor  —  Look, there's Cher on the cover in silver snakeskin, and looking not a day over 40.  She's a survivor, to be sure, and so is Architectural Digest, the shelter behemoth that seems hardly to have aged …
Stacey Higginbotham / GigaOM:
Akamai Beefs Up Network Ahead of the World Cup  —  Akamai has spent the last year building up its network capacity in anticipation of global Internet traffic hitting a record high due to the World Cup, which gets under way this Friday, according to an AP article this morning.
Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
Linda Douglass, former Obama aide, rejoins mainstream media  —  Linda Douglass, the veteran network correspondent who became President Obama's chief health care spokeswoman, is heading back to journalism.  —  She is joining the Atlantic as a vice president at a time when David Bradley's media operation …
Discussion: Romenesko and The Politico
Christopher Mims / Technology Review:
Why Instapaper Will Never Be Booted From the iTunes App Store  —  Creator of the popular reading app Marco Armenti on how he's managed to avoid angering the New York Times - so far.  —  Publicity-wise, nothing could have been better for bestselling iPad newsreader Pulse than being featured …
Discussion: TechCrunch
RELATED:
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
Meet the Two Grad Students Who Freaked Out the NYT-The Pulse iPad …
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
The TV Guide Is Dead, Right?  Not at the Los Angeles Times.  —  Two articles of faith among the digerati:  — Print editions of newspapers are going, going, gone.  — TV may not be going anywhere.  But it will get a lot better when we can use the Web to find our favorite shows.
Jeremy Peters / Media Decoder:
Washington Post Reporter Cancels Book Party Appearance  —  Of all the image problems the media has, few are as bruising as the perception that journalists are too cozy with the powerful people they cover.  —  And few newspapers know that better than The Washington Post …
Discussion: Gawker, Romenesko and Cision
Chris Rovzar / New York Magazine:
Talking With the Feisty Newsweek Tumblr Writer  —  Newsweek.com  —  Since late last month, when it was announced that Newsweek was going to go on the auction block, the magazine has received advice and criticism (seemingly more of the latter) from all corners of the Internet.
Discussion: Romenesko and Strupp
Alex Wilhelm / The Next Web:
What Happens To Blogging When Twitter Goes Down  —  Twitter pulled a Twitter today and went down, as you well know, and thus took the blogging world crashing along with it.  It is no small secret that in regards to online content dissemination (which is not a dirty word, I promise), Twitter is quickly becoming the de facto solution.
Mirror Awards:
Newhouse School announces winners in fourth annual Mirror Awards  —  Syracuse University's S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications today presented seven awards at the fourth annual Mirror Awards luncheon honoring excellence in media industry reporting.
Steve Busfield / Guardian:
GMG reveals executive pay  —  Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger takes cut of £34,000 in year of pay freeze, with bonuses for three top executives  —  The Guardian editor-in-chief, Alan Rusbridger, took a voluntary pay cut of £34,000 in the 12 months to the end of March …
Discussion: paidContent and Jon Slattery
Hamilton Nolan / Gawker:
Staff Fleeing the ‘Awful’ New York Post  —  A serious staff exodus is underway at the New York Post.  The paper has lost several big names already this year.  Now, several more (including Neel Shah) are leaving.  Col Allan's management skills are perhaps not the best?
Robert Birnbaum / The Morning News:
David Remnick  —  To say that David Remnick should need no introduction to readers of The Morning News may be, uh, arrogant, or at least presumptuous.  Then again, it is a complex world, isn't it?  —  Since 1998, David Remnick has been the editor of the New Yorker magazine …
Robert McMillan / PC World:
Mass Web Attack Hits Wall Street Journal, Jerusalem Post  —  Internet users have been hit by a widespread Web attack that has compromised thousands of Web sites, including Web pages belonging to the Wall Street Journal and the Jerusalem Post.  —  Estimates of the total number …
Alex Williams / New York Times:
Notoriety in a Tight Embrace  —  “THE universe has given me nine lives, and clinically I have burned through eight of them,” said the former editor of Men's Fitness and self-styled sexual libertine who appeared to flame out after he emerged as a player in a series of recent scandals.
Digital Deliverance LLC:
The Placebo Called Convergence  —  Crosbie's Manifesto - Part Two  —  It doesn't matter whether executives, housewives, politicians, or plumbers.  Most people's ability to perceive change is inversely proportional to its scale.  They hail superficial changes as transformative …
Discussion: Kirk LaPointe's …
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Sideways: The First iPad-Only Magazine Is About . . . The iPad  —  While the print magazine industry is hanging its hopes on the iPad to lead it to the digital promised land where people actually pay for digital editions, it is still stuck with adapting a product designed for paper to the screen.
Golnaz Esfandiari / Foreign Policy:
The Twitter Devolution  —  Far from being a tool of revolution in Iran over the last year, the Internet, in many ways, just complicated the picture.  —  Before one of the major Iranian protests of the past year, a journalist in Germany showed me a list of three prominent Twitter accounts …
Discussion: Guardian
Felix Salmon:
The FT's experiment with paywalled blogs  —  Thanks to JDB for alerting me to the fact that the FT is now moving its blogs behind its paywall, starting with Money Supply: … The post has received three comments so far, all of which are from subscribers to the print newspaper who say that they will henceforth no longer read the blog.
Sue Halpern / New York Review of Books:
What the iPad Can't Do  —  Inside cover of David Foster Wallace's annotated copy of Don DeLillo's Players  —  Not long after the iPad went on sale in early April, the Ilinois Institute of Technology announced that it would be providing each member of next fall's freshman class with one of the new Apple devices.
 
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 More News: 
Carole Wurzelbacher / Editors Weblog:
Despite industry problems, Japanese print readership remains high
James Robinson / Guardian:
Public relaxed over TV swearing
Rob Beschizza / Boing Boing:
Gallery: Digitizing the past and present at the Library of Congress
Discussion: Gizmodo and ResourceShelf
Maureen O'Connor / Gawker:
How Tabloids Became an Advertisement for Reality TV
Discussion: New York Post
Mark Tapscott / Washington Examiner:
Evasive FTC wants it both ways on ‘reinventing journalism’
Timothy A. Clary / Newsweek:
Drumbeats: The Tech Press Turns on Microsoft's Ballmer
Discussion: TUAW, Silicon Alley Insider and Fortune
 Earlier Picks: 
Regina D'Alesio / MinOnline:
min Q&A: Prevention's Murcko and the Secret to Double-Digit Growth
Andy Plesser / Beet.TV:
Yahoo's Old Fashion Take on Value of Journalism: Scoops Drive a Media Business
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Glam Swings For The Fences With Glam Adapt, An Ad-Serving Platform Built For Brands
Discussion: VentureBeat and paidContent
Crain's New York Business:
Newsstand battle: Woman's World may trump People
Discussion: Romenesko
People-Press.org:
News Media Trusted For Information On Oil Leak
Discussion: Media Decoder
Sarah Rabil / Bloomberg:
Viacom to Start Paying Dividend, Buy Back Stock Amid Ad Rebound
Discussion: rbr.com
Jim Romenesko / Romenesko:
WSJ editor: How many apps will merely be mediocre or meaningless?
Wall Street Journal:
Reporters Scramble for White House's Prize Perch
 

 
From Techmeme:

Ben Lovejoy / 9to5Mac:
Kuo: Apple's M5 chip to use TSMC's advanced N3P node; M5 Pro, Max, and Ultra will use a new server-grade SoIC packaging featuring separate CPU and GPU designs

Financial Times:
Sources: Meta plans to add displays to its Ray-Ban glasses as soon as H2 2025 to show notifications or AI responses, and has accelerated Orion's development

Ethan Mollick / One Useful Thing:
Google and OpenAI's AI product announcements over the past month have transformed the state of AI and show the breadth and pace of change

 
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