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6:35 PM ET, December 14, 2010

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
New York Post:
Denton's disgrace  —  Tweet  —  A Manhattan woman's life was turned upside down yesterday, one day after hackers gained access to Gawker Media's servers, exposing her e-mail account, password and other personal information.  —  Within hours, the hackers had used her Gawker information …
RELATED:
Daniel Kennedy / The Firewall:
Discussing Gawker's Breach With Founder Nick Denton
David Kaplan / paidContent:
Reuters America Gets News Service Deep Into Aggregating  —  As part of Thomson Reuters (NYSE: TRI) expansion into more general news service in addition to its financial reports, the company has launched Reuters America, it's most direct challenge to the Associated Press position as a supplier of articles and photos to newspapers.
RELATED:
Ken Doctor / Newsonomics:   Reuters America Claims New Territory; First Stop, Chicago & Tribune
YouTube Blog:
Double rainbows, annoying oranges and bed intruders: the year on YouTube … Email This  —  BlogThis!  —  Share to Twitter  —  Share to Facebook  —  Share to Google Buzz
RELATED:
The Atlantic Online:
The Unknown Blogger Who Changed WikiLeaks Coverage  —  When historians look back at WikiLeaks and how the world's pundits tried to make sense of what was happening, they'll see a familiar list of sources: Foreign Policy's Evgeny Morozov, The Guardian's John Noughton, The New York Times' David Carr …
Discussion: The Independent
Joe Pompeo / Yahoo! News:
The Awl to start paying its writers in January  —  The Awl, Choire Sicha and Alex Balk's irreverent and idiosyncratic 2-year-old journalism start-up, will as of Jan. 1 start paying the writers who have helped turn the site into a culture and media must-read with half a million monthly visitors.
Wall Street Journal:
Comcast Service Combines Web, TV  —  Comcast Corp. is testing a new service that knits together television and the Internet, as the U.S. cable giant goes after rivals that threaten to undermine its business.  —  Under the new system, which is being tested in Augusta, Ga. …
Andrew Wallenstein / paidContent:
Exclusive: Ex-NBC Chief Resurfaces With Digital Venture  —  Fred Silverman, who ran each of the three broadcast networks over the course of the 1970s, is trying his hand at programming on the internet.  His production company will launch Blip City, which is billed as “the world's biggest live-video get together,” next month.
New York Times:
Larry King Prepares to Sign Off, and Everybody's Talking  —  Famous people liked talking to Larry King, and for many of them, there was one reason: His program was the place to go for unhurried, agendaless conversation.  —  “I consider Larry one of a kind, absolutely one of a kind,” …
Discussion: The Wire, TVNewser and Gawker
Jason Fry / Nieman Reports:
The Sportswriter as Fan: Me and My Blog  —  ‘Our blog made no bones about its utter subjectivity, but we were seen as more objective than those for whom objectivity was a commandment.’  —  In early 2005 as a technology columnist for The Wall Street Journal Online, I returned repeatedly to blogging as a subject.
Ari Samsky / splicetoday.com:
A Subject of Astonishingly Small Importance  —  The New York Times, out of touch and incoherent.  —  ReservasdeCoches.com  —  I always enjoy reading Arthur Brisbane, the recently appointed public editor of The New York Times.  Brisbane supposedly acts as a representative of the Times' readership …
Joe Flint / Los Angeles Times:
By securing Howard Stern, Sirius XM Radio avoids static  —  The satellite radio company's new five-year deal with the talk show host gives Wall Street a strong signal that it will remain competitive with over-the-air stations.  —  Talk radio host Howard Stern agreed to a new five-year contract with Sirius XM Radio last week.
Wall Street Journal:
Air Force Blocks Sites With Leaked Cables  —  The U.S. Air Force is blocking its personnel from using work computers to view the websites of the New York Times and other major publications that have posted secret material obtained by Wikileaks, people familiar with the matter say.
Alex Weprin / WebNewser:
CNBC Goes ‘Pro’ With Pay Digital, Mobile Service  —  CNBC is launching a premium digital and mobile service, CNBC Pro, with a suite of features meant to appeal to Wall Street professionals.  At launch, the service will be available on PCs and Blackberry devices, with support for most other smartphones …
Discussion: Talking Biz News and MediaPost
Gillian Reagan / Bookish:
The Making of the Times' 10 Best Books of 2010  —  Sam Tanenhaus, editor of The New York Times Book Review, insists that getting on the Times' 10 Best Books of 2010 list is not a prize.  There's no ribbon.  No ceremony.  No giant check handed to a weeping recipient.
Robert Andrews / paidContent:UK:
France Says Google Is Main Cause Of News Publishers' Woes  —  French authorities have finally got some kind of ruling against Google (NSDQ: GOOG) - but it turns out to be rather toothless.  —  The competition watchdog, L'Autorité de la Concurrence, in an opinion expressed to the finance minister …
John Eggerton / Multichannel News:
Viacom Raises Red Flags On Comcast/NBCU  —  Viacom, according to an ex parte filing, expressed concerns that the proposed merger of Comcast with NBC Universal would impact independent programming during meetings with Democratic Federal Communications Commission commissioners Michael Copps and Mignon Clyburn.
Discussion: rbr.com and GigaOM
Nieman Reports:
Community Host: An Emerging Newsroom ‘Beat’ Without a Guide  —  TBD's community engagement team listens—and responds—in a city where everyone is talking: Washington, D.C.  —  By TBD's Community Engagement Team  —  The job of engaging with those formerly known as “the audience” …
Discussion: Nieman Journalism Lab
Andy Plesser / Beet.TV:
Examiner.com is World's Largest ‘News’ Organization...67,000 Writers Under Contract in the U.S. — Inks Content Deal with Reuters  —  While not a conventional news organization, Denver-based Examiner.com may be the world's largest by the sheer size of its writing stable and the amount of content being produced.
Discussion: Market Wire and Gawker
 
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 More News: 
Michael Calderone / Yahoo! News:
Givhan, Gopnik leaving the Washington Post
Discussion: Media Decoder and On Media's Blog
Andrea Morabito / Broadcasting & Cable:
Cohen Upped To EVP At Bravo
Discussion: MediaPost
Lucia Moses / Adweek:
More Signs Pointing Towards Hearst Buying Hachette
Discussion: mediabistro.com and FishbowlNY
Choire Sicha / The Awl:
We Need New Ways of Judging the Success of Websites
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Now That We Have the Web, Do We Need Associated Press?
Bill Carter / Media Decoder:
Jimmy Kimmel Extends Run on ABC
Media Week:
CNN launches interactive iPad app
 Earlier Picks: 
Cory Doctorow / Boing Boing:
Dan Gillmor's Mediactive: masterclass in 21st century journalism …
Discussion: Mediactive
David Kravets / Threat Level:
Supreme Court Rules Against ‘First-Sale’ Copyright Doctrine
Discussion: TeleRead and ResourceShelf
Scripting News:
A Web Trust to publish and store our creative work
Discussion: The Huffington Post and Emily Bell
Robert Hernandez / Online Journalism Review:
Journalism of the Web, not just on it: Jim Brady discusses …
John Eggerton / Multichannel:
Ivi Blows Into Windy City
Brad Wellen / mediabistro.com:
Harper's Magazine Released on iPad
Steven Brill / Nieman Journalism Lab:
2011 will bring ebook battles, paywall successes, and a new model …
Ameet Sachdev / Chicago Tribune:
Creditors sue to get money back from Tribune Co. executives, managers
Discussion: Poynter and paidContent