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4:00 AM ET, September 6, 2010

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Guardian:
MPs seek fresh investigation into NoW phone hacking  —  • Calls for parliament to order second inquiry into hacking  —  • Scotland Yard to examine allegations by former NoW reporter  —  News International and David Cameron's PR chief, Andy Coulson, face the prospect …
RELATED:
Jack Shafer / Slate:
Team Murdoch on Ethics  —  Let's review the recent ethical conduct of Rupert Murdoch's London tabloid, News of World.  —  In 2007, News of the World reporter Clive Goodman, and a private investigator who worked with him, Glenn Mulcaire, went to jail for hacking the phone mail of aides to the royal family.
Jeremy W. Peters / Media Decoder:
New York Observer to Cast Its Net Beyond the Upper East Side  —  Listening to Kyle Pope, the editor of The New York Observer, discuss how he wants to re-energize his newspaper sounds a lot like someone describing a Broadway show or a television series that has run a little past its prime.
Arthur S. Brisbane / New York Times:
In an Age of Voices, Moving Beyond the Facts  —  WHAT some call opinion, others call interpretive journalism — a label as opaque as the practice.  Call it what you will, nothing has generated more reader indignation in the past few weeks than when it has appeared on a news page.
Frédéric Filloux / Monday Note:
The newswire quandary  —  Questions: should newswire agencies serve consumers - directly?  And, to a broader extent, how does the current information shift impact the agencies' future?  Two recent events lead me to explore these questions in today's Monday Note.
Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
Some Newspapers Shift Coverage After Tracking Readers Online  —  In most businesses, not knowing how well a particular product is performing would be almost unthinkable.  But newspapers have always been a peculiar business, one that has stubbornly, proudly clung to a sense that focusing …
Discussion: College Media Matters
Adam Penenberg / Fast Company:
The $131M Ford Rollover Death Verdict That Twitter Broke  —  Fast Company's Adam L. Penenberg tweets the breaking news about a verdict against Ford in the death of rising Mets star Brian Cole.  As reporters lagged behind on the story, Penenberg discovered a new media use for the 140-character format.
Discussion: ReadWriteWeb and TechCrunch
RELATED:
Frances Martel / Mediaite:   When Journalists Bury The Lede, Is Twitter The New Way To Dig It Back Up?
Jeff Jarvis / BuzzMachine:
Regulating sex and speech  —  Let me start with a disclosure: I hope to think that Craig Newmark is a friend.  He can be as hard for me to read as James Joyce or C++.  But I know him as a decent and genuine man who believes that he is bringing a service to millions of people …
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Blogging And Mass Psychomanipulation  —  If I ever write another book it will probably be about one of three topics.  The first is the truth about how the press and journalism really works - the sausage making - to show just how much of a beautiful, subjective and chaotic mess it all is.
Discussion: SmoothSpan Blog
Ben Parr / Mashable!:
Kanye West and How Twitter Has Changed the Way We Communicate  —  If you needed any more proof that Twitter has transformed how we absorb information and communicate, look no further than Kanye West.  —  Just a few hours ago, the superstar rapper let loose a barrage of 70+ tweets …
Rick Edmonds / The Biz Blog:
Why USA Today's Declines Led to Radical Restructuring  —  When Gannett's USA Today announced 10 new executive appointments and a “pretty radical” restructuring August 27, the company left plenty of questions unanswered.  —  What exactly are these new “content rings,” which eventually …
Discussion: Leadership
David Rothman / The Solomon Scandals:
TBD hyperlocal site's traffic pops up during hostage crisis at Discovery Channel's headquarters  —  TBD's new hyperlocal Web site for the D.C. area is no great shakes so far in the visitor count department, but it's too early to pass judgment.  That's what I wrote last month.
 
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 More News: 
Paola Totaro / Sydney Morning Herald:
To catch a cheat: behind the scenes of ‘gotcha’ journalism
Andrew Ferguson / Commentary:
PRESS MAN: Pundit (Declined)
Doc Searls Weblog:
Why Howard Stern's next act is Internet radio
Devon Glenn / FishbowlNY:
‘Condé Nast meets Demand Media’: New Platform Connects …
Discussion: eMedia Vitals
Mark Oppenheimer / New York Times:
A Niche of the Unreal in a World of Credulity
 Earlier Picks: 
Sharon Waxman / The Wrap:
Updated: Eminem Wins Royalties from Universal, UMG Will Fight It
Associated Press:
AP Interview: Wikipedia founder bullish on news
Discussion: Mashable!
Bloomberg:
Google Loses German Court Ruling Over YouTube Videos
Discussion: PlagiarismToday
 

 
From Techmeme:

Gaby Del Valle / The Verge:
The US Senate reauthorizes FISA's Section 702; some communication service providers had threatened to stop cooperating with the US government in case of a lapse

Daniel Wiessner / Reuters:
Google scraps a 2019 policy requiring US suppliers and staffing firms to pay their employees $15 an hour and provide health insurance and other benefits

Isabelle Bousquette / Wall Street Journal:
PCs that can run large AI models may drive an enterprise PC replacement cycle, but some CIOs say they'll wait for the category to mature and prices to come down

 
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