Top News:

Why Demand Media Really Is a Media Company and Its IPO Will Succeed — Critics Conveniently Forget That Media Companies Have Always Scrambled to Give People Content They're Looking for — Today, Demand Media will have its IPO, and while the company and its model have taken a lot of hits lately …
Discussion:
eMedia Vitals and Business Week
RELATED:

Demand Media Says It's Getting Along Just Fine With Google, Thank You Very Much
Discussion:
Deal Journal and Poynter

Congratulations, Demand Media. You're Still Pretty Dumb.
Discussion:
The Wire, The Atlantic Online, Gannett Blog and Deal Journal

Demand Media shares soar 34% in IPO
Discussion:
CJR, ReadWriteWeb, New York Magazine, paidContent, Poynter, Poynter, Epicenter, Future of Journalism, Exile On Wall Street, VentureBeat and Wall Street Journal


Dealing With Assange and the Secrets He Spilled — This past June, Alan Rusbridger, the editor of The Guardian, phoned me and asked, mysteriously, whether I had any idea how to arrange a secure communication. Not really, I confessed. The Times doesn't have encrypted phone lines, or a Cone of Silence.
RELATED:

Bill Keller's Clash with Assange
Discussion:
Gawker, Techdirt, @chanders and The Atlantic Online


Patch Is A Huge Waste Of Money, And It Has Us Worried About Tim Armstrong's Ability To Run AOL — AOL CEO Tim Armstrong believes that its local blog network, Patch, will be a “major” part of the company's turnaround as it fills one of the largest “white spaces” left on the Internet.
Discussion:
NetNewsCheck Latest, eMedia Vitals and Change of Subject

The disruptors arrive at Davos — Last year at Davos, I said I was among the disrupted when I preferred to be among the disruptors. — The disruptor arrived last night. Daniel Domscheit-Berg, former spokesman for Wikileaks and founder of the competitive OpenSecrets …
Discussion:
Canadian Press
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Localeaks: A Drop-Box for Anonymous Tips to 1400 U.S. Newspapers — Although the mission of WikiLeaks is to “open governments,” it's done quite a lot to make us think about how to open journalism as well. We've seen a number of new whistleblower sites crop up - OpenLeaks and Rospil …
Discussion:
NetNewsCheck Latest, Soup, WebNewser and Lost Remote


Plagiarizing Editor's Boss: 'Byline Doesn't Take Credit for the Work' — Rodale, publisher of Men's Health and employer of serial plagiarist David Zinczenko, explains why ripping writers' bylines off their work, and slapping Zinczenko's on, is OK: “The byline doesn't take credit for the work, but serves as an overarching tag.”
Discussion:
Poynter and @dangillmor
RELATED:

Men's Health Editor Plagiarizes His Own Writers
Discussion:
Regret the Error and FishbowlNY


David Carr Is Journalism's New Superhero in Page One Doc — David Carr, left, chats with The New York Times media editor Bruce Headlam in a scene from Page One. — Photo courtesy Sundance Institute — PARK CITY, Utah — In an attempt to describe the new age of journalism …
Discussion:
Cinema Blend Feeds


Hulu Plots New Script — Just as the digital wave transforms the television industry, Hulu, a pioneer of Internet TV, is in internal discussions to dramatically transform itself. — The free online television service has become one of the most-watched online video properties in the U.S …
Discussion:
The Wire, Engadget, SlashGear and Electronista, more at Techmeme »

Forbes' New Changes Mean More Blending of Ads, Editorial — Mag unveils Web redesign that will place ad content on equal footing — Forbes Media took a radical step last year when it started to put advertisers and outside contributors on equal footing with its editorial staffers, in print and online.


Netflix Takes Aim at the Cable Guys, With a Promise to Start Firing Tomorrow — Interesting PR campaign from Netflix, which is fighting with the cable guys and telcos over the cost of delivering all that streaming video to your living room: The company is going to publish a list of broadband Internet providers, ranked by performance.
Discussion:
NetworkEffect, Multichannel News, CNET News, Company Town, brandflakesforbreakfast and GigaOM, more at Techmeme »

Home News — Today, The New Republic announces that Marty Peretz, who has been editor-in-chief of the magazine for 37 years, will become editor-in-chief emeritus. In addition, he will move from writing his blog, The Spine, to writing a column for the website.
Discussion:
Salon


Netflix Passes 20 Million Subscribers But Doesn't Give Full-Year Guidance — Netflix's Q4 subscriber growth beat the Street, passing 20 million subscribers for the first time, but revenue was a little weak. — Notably, Netflix is NOT providing full-year revenue or subscriber growth guidance …
Discussion:
NetNewsCheck Latest, SAI, Macgasm, MacStories and CNET News

Memo Pad: GQ's Menswear Finalists... Bill Keller's New Column... THE FUTURE LOOKS BRIGHT: GQ has revealed the finalists for its fourth annual Best New Menswear Designers in America competition, with the talent pool this year including Patrik Ervell, Alexander Wang for his T by Alexander Wang line …


Why And How Digital Music Products Have Indeed Failed — There's been a lot of buzz (some positive and not so positive!) about comments I have made about the current state of the digital music market in the New York Times and at Midem. — The quote which really grabbed the attention was …
Discussion:
MediaPost


Before meeting the press, they met Mr. Aly — There is a tradition on “Meet the Press,” television's longest-running news program, to follow the political grilling and roundtable conversation with a friendly off-the-record breakfast. The show this past Sunday seemed no different.
Discussion:
FishbowlDC, Poynter and CJR

Investigations tool DocumentCloud goes public (PS: documents drive traffic) — The rather lovely DocumentCloud - a tool that allows journalists to share, annotate, connect and organise documents - has finally emerged from its closet and made itself available to public searches.
Discussion:
DocumentCloud and Future of Journalism


Introducing TED Books — Today, we're thrilled to announce the launch of TED Books, an imprint of short nonfiction works designed for digital distribution. Shorter than traditional books, TED Books run less than 20,000 words each — long enough to explain a powerful idea, but short enough to be read in a single sitting.
Discussion:
Boing Boing, VentureBeat and ReadWriteWeb

Dear commenters, Steve Doocy is reading — One of the themes of the Esquire profile of Roger Ailes, with which Ailes cooperated, is that Ailes reads ever word written about him. — You might think that was an exaggeration. But apparently he does, or someone over on Sixth Avenue does.
Discussion:
On Media's Blog, Yahoo! News, Media Matters for America, Mediaite, The Atlantic Wire, @tolles, Gawker and Swampland
RELATED:

Roger Ailes on Roger Ailes: The Interview Transcripts, Part 1
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Mediaite, FishbowlNY, The Atlantic Wire and Yahoo! News