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7:35 AM ET, August 23, 2011

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
Journalists Kept in Hotel as Battle Rages Outside  —  With an 18,000-square-foot spa, helicopter service upon request and a self-described “culture of service perfection,” the Rixos is Tripoli's premier hotel.  —  But over the weekend, the 120-room oasis in the center of the war-torn Libyan capital became …
Discussion: Adweek
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Alex Alvarez / Mediaite:
Covering Libya: Who Was There, Who Wasn't, And Who Aired Caught On Tape
Discussion: Salon, Adweek, ProPublica and TVNewser
Brooks Boliek / The Politico:
FCC finally kills off fairness doctrine  —  The FCC gave the coup de grace to the fairness doctrine Monday as the commission axed more than 80 media industry rules.  —  Earlier this summer FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski agreed to erase the post WWII-era rule, but the action Monday puts …
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Jasmin Melvin / Reuters:
Outdated US media rules to be taken off the books  —  The U.S. Federal Communications Commission is stripping 83 rules from its books as part of its reform agenda and commitment to a request from President Barack Obama earlier in the year to improve or remove any rules that were out of date, the agency said on Monday.
Heather Kelly / VentureBeat:
The Daily Dot wants to be a small town paper for the entire Internet  —  The biggest hurdle to enjoying The Daily Dot, a fun new online news site that launches today, is that its premise is based on a bad metaphor: The Internet is a community and The Daily Dot is its local paper.
Rob Lewis / Techvibes.com:
Vancouver's Zite to be acquired by CNN for $20-25 Million?  —  Last week's GROW Conference in Vancouver was a huge success.  All week the city was abuzz as Canada's smartest entrepreneurs descended on the city along with venture capitalists from across Canada and south of the border.
MediaShift:
Teaching Journalism in an Age When News Comes to You  —  Does it matter where a story comes from, as long as it makes the news?  Apparently it doesn't matter at all, to many of the latest crop of journalism students who believe their smart phones hold the keys to truth.
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The NYT's new education site with WNYC will be collaborative, experimental...and meter-free  —  This morning, The New York Times and WNYC announced a new collaboration: SchoolBook, a site for news, data, and conversation about New York City schools.  Slated to launch September 7 …
Felix Salmon / CJR:
Hewlett-Packard and the M&A Scoop  —  The death of the M&A scoop is going to happen slowly, but frankly it should happen as quickly as possible — and the past 24 hours in the history of Hewlett-Packard is an excellent indicator of why.  —  Yesterday, just after noon, Bloomberg found itself …
Discussion: Talking Biz News
Jonathan Stempel / Yahoo! News:
Spitzer sued for libel over his Slate column  —  NEW YORK (Reuters) - Former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer was hit with two libel lawsuits seeking $90 million by former Marsh & McLennan Cos executives over a column posted on Slate.com about an insurance bid-rigging scandal.
Jeff Sonderman / Poynter:
Huge generation gap evident in attitudes about website comments  —  An Ad Age/Ipsos Observer online survey of 1,003 households shows a large generation gap in how people view website commenting.  Young adults (18 to 24) are three and a half times more likely than those 55 and older to comment “often” on Web articles.
Discussion: eMedia Vitals and Techland
Beth Davidz / Poynter:
8-step guide for setting up Newsbeat to see real-time analytics  —  You're sick of Omniture, and Google Analytics just doesn't cut it.  Waiting hours for analytics can be killer in a 24-hour news cycle where minutes, nevertheless seconds, count.  As soon as you post an article you want to know how it's doing.
Discussion: Journalism.co.uk
The Daily Beast:
Murdoch Scandal's Shadow Man  —  Glenn Mulcaire, the private eye who hacked phones for News of the World, has kept a low profile, but a lawsuit is pushing him into the spotlight—and demanding he name names.  Brian Cathcart on why that's bad news for the Murdochs.
Gayle MacDonald / Globe and Mail:
Tony Burman, Al Jazeera and the future of news  —  Tony Burman was in his 11th-floor office at Al Jazeera English in Washington, D.C. - a stone's throw from the White House - when a news item appeared on his computer screen that made the veteran Canadian news man stop dead in his tracks.
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 More News: 
BBC:
D for discretion: Can the modern media keep a secret?
Discussion: Guardian and Free Press
Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
A Conservative Beachhead in the Sunshine
Discussion: Mediaite
Hamilton Nolan / Gawker:
Bill Keller's Goodbye Party Has a Cash Bar
Discussion: FishbowlNY and New York Magazine
Roy Peter Clark / Poynter:
Good tabloid writing turns crap into a front-page natural
Discussion: Reuters and Mediaite
Lucas Shaw / The Wrap:
Magazines Flex Their Apps — But Will They Make Any Money From Them?
Discussion: Noted
 Earlier Picks: 
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
News Corp. Downgraded on Threat From ‘Powerful Enemies’
Discussion: B&C and The Wrap
John Koblin / WWD:
Preview: WSJ Magazine's September Issue
Adweek:
First Mover: Anderson Cooper
New York Magazine:
Size Once Mattered
James Robinson / Guardian:
‘Google needs TV’ will be message at Edinburgh
Staci D. Kramer / paidContent:
Miramax Launching Multi-Title Facebook Movie App In U.S., UK & Turkey
 

 
From Techmeme:

Gaby Del Valle / The Verge:
NYC is partnering with Evolv, a weapons detection company that has faced scrutiny over its machines' accuracy, to test AI-based gun detectors on the subway

Sam Kim / Bloomberg:
South Korean national statistics data: chip output grew 65.3% YoY in February 2024, the most since late 2009, with demand for AI-related memory driving growth

Meredith Whittaker / LPE Project:
The TikTok divestment bill will not offer any meaningful privacy protection from China, but it will further entrench the dominance of US-based social networks

 
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