Top News:
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
Slate Lays Off Staff. Does Its Model Still Make Sense? — You don't have to be an ink-and-paper newspaper to be a dinosaur. — Slate, one of the original internet-only magazines, has laid off four journalists, including someone whose words I often quote in this column, press critic Jack Shafer.
Discussion:
eMedia Vitals, Washington Post, Slate, Adweek and The New York Observer, Thanks:beet_tv
RELATED:
Russell Adams / Wall Street Journal:
Slate's Layoffs Signal Flaws in Web Model — Unexpected ‘Head Winds’ Buffet Online Pioneer's Ad Sales — Since its mid-1990s launch, the online magazine Slate has been a study in whether a Web-only news organization can support a staff of professional journalists churning out original, reported content.
Discussion:
Poynter
Hamilton Nolan / Gawker:
Twilight of the Media Critics
Twilight of the Media Critics
Discussion:
Medacity, The Daily Caller, Future of Journalism and Media Nation
Ravi Somaiya / New York Times:
In Britain, a Meeting on Limiting Social Media — LONDON — British officials and representatives of Twitter, Facebook and BlackBerry met Thursday to discuss voluntary ways to limit or restrict the use of social media to combat crime and periods of civil unrest, while trying to dodge charges …
Discussion:
The Next Web and The Business Insider
Peter Greenberg / Poynter:
Travel is news, so why am I the only travel editor at a major network? — People know me because of travel. But the classic error that many people make - and it's a well-intentioned error - is when they say to me, “When did you make the transition from journalism to travel?”
Discussion:
Editors Weblog and Journalism.org
Chris Ariens / TVNewser:
Contessa Brewer Leaving Daily Anchoring at MSNBC — Contessa Brewer, who has been a fixture on MSNBC since 2003, will no longer be an anchor on the network, TVNewser has learned. — For the last year-and-a-half Brewer has anchored the NoonET hour on MSNBC as well as hosting the weekend documentary series “Caught on Camera.”
Discussion:
Inside Cable News, The Huffington Post, TVWeek.com and LA Observed
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
The Twitter effect: We are all members of the media now — Anyone who has gotten the latest news about Steve Jobs' resignation or the revolution in Libya from Twitter is probably used to the idea that the real-time information network has become a powerful tool for journalism — a point we've made often.
Thanks:rawporter
RELATED:
Jodi Enda / American Journalism Review:
Campaign Coverage in the Time of Twitter
Campaign Coverage in the Time of Twitter
Discussion:
Future of Journalism
David Smydra / Google News Blog:
Google News now crawling with Googlebot — (Cross-posted on the Webmaster Central Blog) — Google News recently updated our infrastructure to crawl with Google's primary user-agent, Googlebot. What does this mean? Very little to most publishers. Any news organizations that wish …
Discussion:
Softpedia News, Search Engine Land, Future of Journalism and WebProNews
Steve Buttry / The Buttry Diary:
Advice for building engagement through newsroom Twitter accounts — Like many institutional Twitter accounts, Journal Register Co. newsroom accounts need to be more engaging and conversational. — We tweet a lot of links to our content. But we're not very personable.
Amy Wicks / WWD:
Kim Kardashian's People Cover a Hit — KARDASHIAN'S A HIT: Kim Kardashian and her over-the-top wedding to New Jersey Nets player Kris Humphries easily beat out the last celebrity wedding cover story to break on people.com (the marriage of Reese Witherspoon and Jim Toth) …
Discussion:
FishbowlNY
Ki Mae Heussner / Adweek:
AOL Huddles With Top M&A Team — AOL has retained two of the biggest names in mergers and acquisitions, law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz and investment banking company Allen & Company LLC. A team from those firms, including Wachtell, Lipton founding partner Martin Lipton …
Discussion:
TVWeek.com, CNET News, The New York Observer, Deal Journal, The Wrap, Between the Lines Blog, Forbes and SAI
Jeff Sonderman / Poynter:
How Steve Jobs has changed (but not saved) journalism — Steve Jobs resigned Wednesday as CEO of Apple Inc., but his legacy will be felt in the news industry for years to come. — In the past five years, Jobs' Apple has simultaneously disrupted, transformed and aided the news industry.
Discussion:
The New York Observer, Forbes, MediaFile, AllThingsD, Softpedia News, Garcia Media, Globe and Mail, digiday:DAILY, ZDNet, Epicenter, Digital Trends, Yahoo! News, Fortune, The Tech Report, HBR.org and The Business Insider, Thanks:jeffsondermanch
Ben Dowell / Guardian:
Rise in defamation involving blogs and Twitter — Cases include action brought by New Zealand cricketer Chris Cairns over former IPL chief's tweets — The growth of social networking sites has seen the number of defamation cases involving online content more than double in the 12 months to June, new research has found.
Discussion:
Press Gazette
Steve Myers / Poynter:
Study: iPad users spend most time with news apps compared with other types — An app analytics company says that news apps generate the longest periods of use among iPad owners. “Based on data from apps subscribing to the firm's analytics platform, users spend over two and a half times …
Discussion:
Future of Journalism, NetNewsCheck Latest, GigaOM and The Loop
New York Post:
Staff cries Wolff — Adweek's top editor, Michael Wolff, is on the hot seat, The Post has learned. — Senior executives at Prometheus Global Media, which owns the title, have been telling business associates that they are unhappy with Adweek under Wolff, sources said.
Discussion:
MediaPost
Carl Sessions Stepp / American Journalism Review:
Hyperlocal Heroes — A firsthand look at how some members of the burgeoning roster of hyperlocal news Web sites do their jobs Mon. August 29, 2011 — Carl Sessions Stepp (cstepp@jmail.umd.edu), AJR's senior editor, teaches at the Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland.
Discussion:
Street Fight