Top News:
Guardian:
News International papers targeted Gordon Brown — Newspapers obtained information from the former prime minister's bank account, legal file and family medical records — Journalists from across News International repeatedly targeted the former prime minister Gordon Brown …
Discussion:
Mirror.co.uk, This Is London, New York Times, The Independent, paidContent, The Wire, News: News blog, Crikey, blogs.telegraph.co.uk, The Sun, CJR, The Huffington Post, Poynter, Press Gazette, MediaFile, The New Yorker Blog, Runnin' Scared, Gawker, Media & Entertainment, Economist, The Lede, New York Magazine, American Journalism Review, Guy Fawkes' blog, Tom Watson, Gothamist, The Staggers, Liberal Conspiracy, The Daily Dish, Political Scrapbook, Sky News, The Raw Story, Adweek, On Media's Blog, Mother Jones and Jon Slattery
RELATED:
Simon Dumenco / AdAge:
Life After Rupert's Reign: What Will Happen in a Post-Murdoch World? — With the Closure of the News of the World, the Rule of One of the Most Powerful Media Moguls of All Time Has Officially Begun to Wind Down — With Sunday's closure of News Corp.'s 168-year-old News of the World …
Discussion:
Guardian, Adweek, paidContent, Company Town, Media Matters for America, Telegraph, On Media's Blog, Media & Entertainment, The New Yorker Blog, Harper's, Broadcasting & Cable, Newspaper Death Watch, Erik Wemple, mediabistro.com, The Wrap, The Wire, Rolling Stone, Globe and Mail, Press Gazette and Media Week
New York Times:
British Tabloid Targeted Investigators' Phone Data — LONDON — Shortly after Scotland Yard began its initial criminal inquiry of phone hacking by The News of the World in 2006, five senior police investigators discovered that their own mobile phone messages had been targeted by the tabloid and had most likely been listened to.
Discussion:
The Wire
Paul Mason / BBC:
Murdoch: the network defeats the hierarchy — Rupert Murdoch has dispensed power, terrorized politicians and shaped politics — The Murdoch empire fractured, a Conservative prime minister attracting bets on his resignation, the Metropolitan Police on the edge of yet another existential crisis …
Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
British tabloid tactics are rampant in American journalism, too — It takes some doing to get an entire country up in arms about media misconduct, but News of the World rose to the occasion. — By hacking into the phones of terror victims and a missing 13-year-old girl later found murdered …
Discussion:
FishbowlDC, The Independent, CJR and Kirk LaPointe's …
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
The Twisted Logic of Murdoch's Pivot on BSkyB Deal — Like a school of fish making random zigzags to confuse a pursuing shark, Rupert Murdoch is resorting to wild maneuvers to preserve his media empire — and his ambitions of still greater dominance — as it attempts to outrun a scandal that threatens to consume it.
Discussion:
News Corporation, Forbes.com, Wall Street Journal, Multichannel, Adweek, The Huffington Post, The Wire and Guardian
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
News Corp. Shareholders in Class Action Over Hacking — Rupert Murdoch standing by embattled News International CEO Rebekah Brooks. Image by AFP/Getty Images via @daylife — As if Rupert Murdoch didn't already have enough of a legal/financial/public relational disaster on his hands …
Discussion:
Multichannel, Guardian, paidContent:UK, New York Magazine, Forbes.com, Deadline.com and Future of Journalism
Andrew Essex / News Desk:
James Murdoch, Then and Now — James Murdoch, the younger son of Rupert Murdoch, who had been positioned to succeed him in leading News Corp., may face criminal charges in the phone-hacking scandal convulsing England. But there was a time not long ago when the embattled thirty-eight-year-old wanted no part of the family business.
Discussion:
Guardian, Sydney Morning Herald, Adweek, Forbes.com, Company Town and The Wire
Nick Davies / Guardian:
Charles and Camilla warned over hacking
Charles and Camilla warned over hacking
Discussion:
BBC, Adweek and The Huffington Post
John F. Burns / New York Times:
Labour Party Vows to Fight Murdoch's Bid to Take Over Satellite Company
Labour Party Vows to Fight Murdoch's Bid to Take Over Satellite Company
David Carr / New York Times:
A Tabloid Shame, Exposed by Earnest Rivals
A Tabloid Shame, Exposed by Earnest Rivals
Discussion:
The Daily Beast, The Huffington Post, Poynter, Guardian, The Corsair and The Wire
Simon Dumenco / AdAge:
What It's Like to Get Used and Abused by The Huffington Post — The Blog Queen Defends Her Aggregation Practices by Saying She Drives Traffic. Oh, Really? — One of the great and pressing questions of the post-blog age is: What constitutes unfair — unethical — aggregation?
Discussion:
The Awl, FishbowlNY, Poynter, paidContent, Strange Attractor, WebProNews and eMedia Vitals
RELATED:
Steve Myers / Poynter:
Huffington Post suspends writer, apologizes for over-aggregated post — The Huffington Post has suspended Amy Lee, who wrote a summary of an Ad Age post that Simon Dumenco complained was unethical and brought just 57 page views to AdAge.com. Huffington Post Executive Business Editor Peter Goodman apologized …
Discussion:
Gawker, The Informer, FishbowlNY, The Wire, LA Observed and Editors Weblog
Kai Nagata:
Why I quit my job: — Until Thursday, I was CTV's Quebec City Bureau Chief, based at the National Assembly, mostly covering politics. It's a fascinating beat - the most interesting provincial legislature in Canada, and the stories coming out of there lately have been huge.
Discussion:
National Review and THE PLANET GUYS
Chris Rovzar / New York Magazine:
Newsweek.com Will Cease to Exist on July 19 — Right now if you go to newsweek.com, you'll see a basic magazine website, updated with content from the print version of the mag and a top navigation bar that directs you to content on its sister site, dailybeast.com.
Discussion:
Folio, The Wrap, MediaPost and FishbowlNY
Erik Wemple:
New York Post prostitution story gets shakier — The New York Post's “scoop” on Dominique Strauss Kahn's accuser is getting fishier, to the extent that's possible. The paper appears to have had documentation challenging the reliability of its only source in a story alleging that the accuser had worked as a prostitute.
Discussion:
New York Magazine
Jessica E. Vascellaro / Wall Street Journal:
Netflix Isn't Kicking Tires at Hulu — The sale of video site Hulu LLC is entering its next phase. — Initial presentations to potential suitors mostly wrapped up last week, according to people familiar with the matter. Next, interested bidders will comb through the business in greater detail …
Discussion:
Fast Company, Company Town, Adweek, Online Video News, PC Magazine, GigaOM, NetNewsCheck Latest and Electronista, more at Techmeme »
Chrys Wu / Poynter:
Beginner's guide for journalists who want to understand API documentation — There are three letters that have been floating around the media world for several years now: API. Short for “application programming interface,” an API enables software programs to communicate with one another …
Discussion:
New York Times and Journalism.co.uk
Economist:
Opening statements — There is no question that the internet is transforming the news industry, just as it has reshaped so many other industries. And, as in those other cases, the internet's impact has both positive and negative aspects. Does this, on balance, strengthen or weaken the news system?
Kara Swisher / AllThingsD:
AOL's HuffPost Enters Crowded Online Arena With HuffPost Celebrity Site — The Huffington Post Media Group, AOL's fast-moving content unit, is launching a celebrity site called HuffPost Celebrity today, as well as another called HuffPost Culture. — HuffPost Celebrity …
Paul Bradshaw / Online Journalism Blog:
An experiment in creating an ‘Auto-Debunker’ twitter account — As the conspiracy theories flew around last Friday, one in particular caught fire: the idea that the News Of The World might have been closed down because it would then allow for its assets - i.e. incriminating evidence - to be destroyed.
Discussion:
Poynter and Future Journalism Project
Chip Bayers / Adweek:
Why Silicon Valley Can't Sell — Drive up and down the 101 Freeway in Silicon Valley, or cast your gaze north toward Seattle, and media companies, which expect to book over $20 billion in advertising in 2011, appear to be everywhere. But visit the biggest of these companies and ask …
Discussion:
digiday:DAILY