Top News:
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The newsonomics of Sunday paper/tablet subscriptions — Editor's Note: Each week, Ken Doctor — author of Newsonomics and longtime watcher of the business side of digital news — writes about the economics of news for the Lab. — Digital news business models are playing out on pool tables these days.
Discussion:
CJR and Editors Weblog
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Nate Silver / FiveThirtyEight:
A Note to Our Readers on the Times Pay Model and the Economics of Reporting — Let me say up front that I have some mixed feelings about The New York Times's metered model, which takes effect on March 28. I'd encourage you to read my colleague David Carr's take, as well as some of the many analyses …
Discussion:
Great Speculations, On Media's Blog, Reuters, FishbowlNY and PC Magazine
Damon Kiesow / Poynter:
The New York Times subscription plan doesn't protect print, it promotes the mobile Web — The New York Times' new digital subscription pricing has been characterized by some as a backward-looking effort to protect print revenue. But after comparing the Times' subscription prices …
Discussion:
FishbowlNY, Boing Boing and Gizmodo
Robert Andrews / paidContent:UK:
UK Times Plans Upgrade To Its ‘Berlin Wall’
Staci D. Kramer / paidContent:
Brill, Crovitz & Co. Sell Journalism Online To RR Donnelly — That was fast. Just shy of two years after launch, Steve Brill, Gordon Crovitz and Leo Hindery Jr. have sold their “make journalism pay” business to someone who already makes money from publishing.
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Ken Doctor / Newsonomics:
Beyond Journalism, Beyond Press, Journalism Online Moves into the B2B World — How do newsies read the news about Journalism Online selling itself to RR Donnelley this morning? — Well, maybe myopically. — The deal, price unannounced, tells us a number of things about the newspaper industry …
Discussion:
Tower Ticker, Poynter, The Wire and The Wrap
Julie Bosman / Media Decoder:
Self-Publisher Signs Four-Book Deal With St. Martin's — Amanda Hocking, the 26-year-old author who shot to fame by selling more than a million copies of her self-published books, has signed up with a traditional publisher for her next series. — St. Martin's Press, part of Macmillan …
Discussion:
Amanda Hocking's Blog, Yahoo! News, TeleRead, Jacket Copy and GalleyCat
Lucia Moses / Adweek:
McKinsey Back at Condé Nast for Phase Three — Consulting firm responsible for deep cuts at publisher ramps up its work there — McKinsey & Co.—the consulting firm that was associated with magazine closings, layoffs and deep budget cuts at Condé Nast—is hard at work again inside 4 Times Square.
Discussion:
New York Magazine
The Atlantic Wire:
Mark Armstrong: What I Read — How do other people deal with the torrent of information that pours down on us all? Do they have some secret? Perhaps. We are asking various people who seem well-informed to describe their media diets. This is from a conversation with Mark Armstrong …
Thanks:jaredbkeller
Greg Sandoval / CNET News:
Google begins testing Google Music internally — Google has begun testing Google Music internally, a sign that the much anticipated service is nearly ready to launch. — Google employees have begun a process commonly referred to in Silicon Valley as dog fooding, when employees try …
Discussion:
SAI, more at Techmeme »
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
Twitter Ads Move Forward by Carving Up The Globe — A small but important step in the evolution of Twitter's ad business: The company is now letting some marketers segment some of their purchases by location. — Which means a Twitter user in, say, the U.K. may now see a different ad than one in the U.S.
Discussion:
ClickZ
Nieman Journalism Lab:
The power of brand to inspire bias: How do perceptions of Al Jazeera English change once the logo's gone? — William Youmans and Katie Brown are Ph.D. candidates in communication studies at the University of Michigan who just published an interesting paper in the journal Arab Media & Society …
Discussion:
Accuracy in Media
Robert MacMillan:
Calling people at home for a story? You heathen! — A public relations person at a well known company told one of my reporter colleagues here that he was stalking board members of a company that he covers. Why? Because he called them at home, and had not told her before what story he was working on.
Andy Plesser / Beet.TV:
Little Aspera Moving Giant Video Files for iTunes, BBC, Netflix, Amazon, Hulu and Most of Hollywood — Aspera, a small, privately-funded start-up in Emeryville, California, has developed the means to transfer enormous video files at speeds far greater that FTP and other TCP-type protocols.
Discussion:
Future of Journalism and GigaOM
Andrew Wallenstein / Variety:
Time Warner Cable iPad flap heats up — Cabler facing litigation over app that streams live TV channels — Time Warner Cable is facing litigation from at least one of Hollywood's majors in a matter of days over its iPad app that transmits live TV channels within a subscriber's home …
Discussion:
Multichannel
Alexia Tsotsis / TechCrunch:
Find The Best Stuff Around You With Village Voice Media's “Best Of ...” App — In the era of crowd-sourced recommendation services it's hard to remember that people actually recommend stuff for a living. My old employer Village Voice Media, which built the foundation of its 20 online properties …
Discussion:
Riptide 2.0
Jim Romenesko / Poynter:
Writer's disclosure: I used to buy pot from my story subject — Van Smith's story about Reptilian Records owner Christopher Neu pleading guilty to drug charges includes this passage in the 14th paragraph: … Romenesko asked Smith about bringing up his pot days. His response:
Lance Knobel / Davos Newbies:
Google listens... if you shout loudly enough — Yesterday evening I wrote about the bizarre disappearance from Google News of my news site, Berkeleyside. What happens next is either an illustration of the power of digital democracy or an example of the value of friends with fantastic megaphones.
Discussion:
NetNewsCheck Latest
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