Top News:
Adrian Chen / Gawker:
Steve Jobs In Email Pissing Match with College Journalism Student — Steve Jobs is known for replying to random emails sent to his personal Apple email address. Well, a college journalism student from Long Island emailed him about a problem she had with Apple's PR department. Jobs' response?
Discussion:
Hit & Run, Gadget Lab, TechCrunch, Runnin' Scared and Gizmodo
Felix Salmon:
Teaching journalists to read — Every six months or so, The Audit, CJR's financial-journalism blog, holds a breakfast to update interested parties on how the blog is doing. Each breakfast has an invited speaker, and so it was that I found myself at 7:45 this morning in a very posh Upper East Side club …
Keith J. Kelly / New York Post:
Harman, Diller could bring ‘News-Beast’ to life — Tweet — Speculation is swirling anew that Barry Diller is working on a plan to combine his IAC/InterActiveCorp-owned Daily Beast with the Newsweek digital operations. — Such a combination would give both Web operations some critical mass …
Discussion:
Romenesko, Mediaite, Gawker, New York Observer, The Wire, The Atlantic Online, New York Magazine and NYConvergence
Jacqui Cheng / Ars Technica:
Ex-child prostitute sues Village Voice over sex ads — A teenage child trafficking victim has filed a lawsuit against Village Voice Media, for knowingly allowing her pimp to post ads for her “services” on the popular backpage.com. The pimp, Latasha Jewell McFarland, has already pleaded guilty …
Discussion:
Hit & Run
Richard MacManus / ReadWriteWeb:
Tumblr Leaves Posterous in the Dust — One of the more interesting startup battles in recent times has been Tumblr vs. Posterous, two light blogging services that make it easy for anyone to publish ‘found’ things very quickly and at the click of a button. Tumblr was the first kid on the block …
Discussion:
New York Observer
Rachel McAthy / Journalism.co.uk:
UK newspaper puts editorial content onto Foursquare — Reviews from Metro will now be available through location-based service Foursquare, the first UK newspaper to provide editorial content on the platform. — Users will be able to view location-relevant restaurant and film reviews …
Discussion:
paidContent:UK and The Next Web
Michael Roberts / The Latest Word:
I-News: Can Laura Frank's journalism project slow the disappearance of investigative reporting? — With resources and revenues for print and broadcast news operations continuing to shrink, investigative journalism — a vital form, but among the field's most expensive — is becoming more rare with each passing day.
Frances Martel / Mediaite:
Jon Stewart To Throw ‘Rally To Restore Sanity’ On 10.30.10 In DC — Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery- or at least that's what Glenn Beck will be hoping for when he hears this news. Tonight, Jon Stewart announced the “Rally to Restore Sanity”: a march on Washington for people …
John Melloy / CNBC:
Third of Young Netflix Users Cut Cable — An alarming survey by Credit Suisse should serve as a wake up call to the broadcast networks and cable companies that they need to take control of their revenue destiny right now, while they still have some negotiating power.
Discussion:
Yahoo! News, The Wire, Online Video News, NewTeeVee and The Atlantic Online
Wall Street Journal:
News Sites Study Social Media — News organizations are more scientific about studying the value of readers they hook through social media like Twitter and Facebook, as they seek ways to exploit the channels without cannibalizing their businesses. — Icahn Takes Blockbuster Debt Holding
Discussion:
Kirk LaPointe's …
Craig Silverman / CJR:
How to Lose Your Gut — The journalist's guide to gutless online verification — Dean Miller has spent years getting journalists to lose their gut. — “Your gut is the most dangerous thing you have,” says Miller, the director of the Center for News Literacy at Stony Brook University's School …
Martin Belam / currybetdotnet:
Journalism shouldn't be afraid of web metrics — There has been some recent discussion about the impact of metrics in the newsroom on the Nieman Journalism Lab site. — It often seems to me that fear of measuring the performance of news gets simplified by many people into worrying that the outcome will be:
Gautham Nagesh / The Hill:
FCC's Baker: Government shouldn't bail out the media — Government funds for the ailing media industry would jeopardize the freedom of the press and undermine the public's trust in its reporting, according to Federal Communications Commission (FCC) member Meredith Attwell Baker.
Discussion:
Company Town
Ed Walker:
Legal challenges facing online journalists — Had some media law refresher training this morning. It was tough going back three years and trying to remember specific cases but the best bit of the session were the debates about the challenges now faced by journalism when it comes to online and the law.
Discussion:
Journalism.co.uk
Nicholas Carlson / New York Times:
Hacks Into Hackers — Last spring, Nick Bilton, an adjunct professor at New York University (and a New York Times blogger), and his technology class stashed sensors all over their floor at the Tisch School of the Arts: on elevators, in hallways, outside bathrooms, in the lounge and in classrooms.
Lauren Kirchner / CJR:
Checking In on Kachingle — Why haven't any big news sites signed up? — Early in 2009, the micropayment service Kachingle received a lot of attention when a piece in Editor and Publisher suggested that it could—gasp!—"save journalism." By April 2009, Kachingle founder Cynthia Typaldos …
Discussion:
Romenesko
Rick Edmonds / Poynter Onilne:
In Hyperlocal News, Where's the Urgency? — Not to get all Newtonian, but let me propose Edmonds' Law of Inverse Urgency: the more local or hyperlocal the news, the less important it is to get it right away. — I would keep these musings to myself, except that ventures like AOL's Patch …
Discussion:
Lost Remote