Top News:
Jonathan Stempel / Reuters:
NY Times sues Huffington Post over parenting blog — The New York Times Co has sued AOL Inc to force its Huffington Post online news website to rename a parenting blog with a similar name to its own. — In a lawsuit filed late Friday in the U.S. District Court in Manhattan ...
Discussion:
Future of Journalism
Om Malik / GigaOM:
Martin Nisenholtz, Senior VP of Digital, leaving New York Times — Martin Nisenholtz, one of the most respected executives in the online media world, is leaving the New York Times, where he has been senior vice president of digital operations for quite awhile and has helped oversee …
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Jordan Crook / TechCrunch:
Barnes & Noble Officially Unveils The 7-Inch Nook Tablet — In late September, Amazon unveiled a $199 tablet called the Kindle Fire. Obviously this left a massive divide in the market between the much pricier iPad 2 and the new Kindle Fire, which Barnes & Noble has this morning responded to.
Discussion:
AllThingsD, ZDNet, L.A. Times Tech Blog, CNET News, PC Magazine, Wall Street Journal, Pocket-lint and mediabistro.com, more at Techmeme »
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Gayle Feldman / The Bookseller:
Barnes & Noble plans international Nook launch — Barnes & Noble is to expand its e-book service internationally next year, the company's chief executive has revealed. The development was revealed at the company's New York press conference at which it unveiled its $249 Nook Tablet …
Discussion:
paidContent
Nick Davies / Guardian:
News of the World hired investigators to spy on hacking victims' lawyers — Exclusive: Investigators followed and filmed lawyers of hacking victims in apparent bid to gather material on their private lives — The News of the World hired a specialist private investigator to run covert surveillance …
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
If WikiLeaks is dying, then the NYT is partly to blame — In a New York Times piece on the weekend, media writer David Carr argues that WikiLeaks is dying — or at least on life support — for a number of reasons, including founder Julian Assange's court case and a funding crisis that has caused …
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David Carr / New York Times:
Is the WikiLeaks Movement Fading?
Is the WikiLeaks Movement Fading?
Discussion:
Future Journalism Project, Scripting News and Big Journalism
Elizabeth Jensen / New York Times:
At PBS's NewsHour, Departures, Questions and Complaints — It's never good when a news organization loses its political editor just a year before a presidential election. But in the next two weeks, “The PBS NewsHour” will say goodbye not only to its political editor, David Chalian …
Discussion:
Free Press
New York Times:
NBC Struggles for Its Footing — Coming into a new television season, about the only solace for the new management regime at NBC was that the network's prime-time fortunes had been so bad for so long, things could not get much worse. — Oh yes they could — and they have.
Discussion:
TVbytheNumbers and Chickaboomer
Claire Atkinson / New York Post:
Dish Networking: Owner explores live cable channels for Web — Charlie Ergen is weighing a move to offer live cable channels via the Web, likely under his Blockbuster brand name, The Post has learned. — Ergen, who runs satellite provider Dish Network Corp., is talking to program providers …
Discussion:
Business Insider, TVWeek.com and Company Town
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Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Wait a Minute. Does Google Really Want to Be a Cable Guy?
Wait a Minute. Does Google Really Want to Be a Cable Guy?
Discussion:
VatorNews and Shelly Palmer Digital Living
Nilay Patel / The Verge:
Time Warner Cable experiences huge system-wide outage — Hey you — did your internet just freak out? Is it still freaking out? You're not alone: Time Warner Cable customers across the country are experiencing strange outages and slowdowns, and the company says it's recovering from a …
Discussion:
CNET News and PC Magazine, more at Techmeme »
Matthew Flamm / Crain's New York:
Amazon Publishing nabs Deepak Chopra book — Amazon Publishing, the Manhattan-based imprint of the Seattle e-tailing giant, has acquired the next book by best-selling author Deepak Chopra, according to two publishing executives. The deal marks the imprint's third foray
Roger Ebert / Chicago Sun-Times:
The chimes at midnight — Unless we find an angel, our television program will go off the air at the end of its current season. There. I've said it. Usually in television, people use evasive language. Not me. We'll be gone. I want to be honest about why this is. We can't afford to finance it any longer.
Discussion:
Deadline.com, Business Insider, Speakeasy, Hollywood Reporter, The Wrap, The Huffington Post, The Corsair and ArtsBeat