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9:15 PM ET, June 13, 2010

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Robert G. Picard / The Media Business:
Getting It Wrong: The FTC and Policies for the Future of Journalism  —  Following hearings on the state of newspapers this past year, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission staff has now prepared a discussion paper of potential policy recommendations to support the reinvention of journalism.
Discussion: Kirk LaPointe's …
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Eric Pfanner / New York Times:
Other Countries' Newspapers Are Faring Better Than U.S. Counterparts  —  PARIS — The U.S. Federal Trade Commission is looking for ways to “support the reinvention of journalism.”  Possible measures to help the troubled U.S. news business, outlined in a paper published last month and scheduled …
Roger Ebert / Roger Ebert's Journal:
Tweet!  Tweet!  Tweet!  —  I vowed I would never become a Twit.  Now I have Tweeted nearly 10,000 Tweets.  I said Twitter represented the end of civilization.  It now represents a part of the civilization I live in.  I said it was impossible to think of great writing in terms of 140 characters.
Nick Bilton / Bits:
The Defense of Computers, the Internet and Our Brains  —  If you're reading this blog post on a computer, mobile phone or e-reader please stop what you're doing immediately.  You could be making yourself stupid.  And whatever you do, don't click on the links in this article.
J. David Goodman / New York Times:
Now in Blogs, Product Placement  —  Welcome to quid pro post.  —  When a marketer representing Absolut Vodka first offered to sponsor her annual blog festival, Louise Crawford guessed how the other bloggers might react.  —  “Some of them are going to call me a sellout,” Ms. Crawford remembered thinking.
Discussion: Runnin' Scared and City Room
parislemon:
Why This Is News  —  A few people have pinged me about the comments in the latest Calacanis/Facebook story (part III from last night).  Basically, there are a lot of comments amounting to “Why Is This News?”  Certainly there's an argument to be made there — at first the story was about just how hard it was to quit Facebook.
Clark Hoyt / New York Times:
A Final Report From Internal Affairs  —  THIS is my last column as public editor of The Times.  —  For the past three years, my assignment has been to try to help this newspaper live up to its own high journalistic standards as it covered a historic presidential election, two wars …
Discussion: Runnin' Scared
Adam Tinworth / One Man & His Blog:
What Does Facebook Like Do For Blog Traffic?  —  The Typepad team have just published a graph of referrals from Facebook since they made Facebook Like available as an option for their users:  —  Now, admittedly, this is only from a few thousand blogs, and the figures are relative rather than absolute …
Discussion: Mashable! and Everything TypePad
Bloomberg:
Cablevision Systems Agrees to Buy Bresnan for $1.36 Billion  —  Cablevision Systems Corp., the fifth-largest U.S. cable operator, agreed to buy Bresnan Communications Co. for $1.36 billion, people close to the negotiations said.  —  Cablevision competed against bids from TPG Capital …
Discussion: Wall Street Journal and DealBook
Takashi Kitazume / search.japantimes.co.jp:
Shift to charging for online news inevitable, Dow Jones chief says  —  Newspapers around the world will soon have no choice but to start charging for Web content, according to Dow Jones CEO Les Hinton, who called it “madness” to give away “expensive and valuable journalism for nothing.”
Felix Salmon / MediaFile:
Zach Kouwe fired again  —  In February, a NYT blogger, Zachery Kouwe, was fired for plagiarism.  The proximate cause of the firing was a complaint from the WSJ, but he'd had run-ins with other publications in the past, including nicking a memo from Dealbreaker without attribution.
Andrew Alexander / Washington Post:
For The Post, anonymous sources remain a problem  —  Last month, a story about conflicts between parents and childless adults began with an anecdote about an unleashed puppy pestering a toddler in a District park.  After the child's father complained, the dog's owner told The Post that parents …
Steve Buttry / Pursuing the Complete Community …:
New York Times protects its readers from reading about “tweets”  —  Self-anointed guardians of the English language show an amazing, amusing lack of respect for the language they purport to protect.  —  Phil Corbett, Standards Editor of the New York Times, decreed this week that tweet was not …
David Cohen / WebNewser:
The Beautiful Game: Social Media Suits Up for 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa  —  With 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa set to kick off about one hour after this post, Twitter and Facebook — which meant nothing to the average soccer fan during 2006 FIFA World Cup Germany — are donning their jerseys and painting their faces.
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 More News: 
Antonina Jedrzejczak / The Wire:
National Geographic Admits Photo Fraud (Plus: 10 Major Photoshopping Scandals)
David Carr / Media Decoder:
N.Y.P.D. Can Keep Its Secrets: 2004 Convention Arrests Remain Mysterious
James Rainey / Los Angeles Times:
On the Media: Overdosing on social networking media
Discussion: Kirk LaPointe's …
 Earlier Picks: 
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The Atlantic rides again (again)
Business Week:
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