Top News:
The Independent:
Piers Morgan ‘unaware of phone hacking’ — Former tabloid newspaper editor Piers Morgan today told an inquiry into press standards that he was unaware of any phone hacking when in charge at the Daily Mirror. And Mr Morgan said he had not been “directly involved” in the use of private investigators at the Daily Mirror.
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Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
Piers Morgan Attacks Critics, Calls Accuser Insane at Ethics Hearing — Piers Morgan is tired of people trying to tie him to the phone-hacking scandal consuming the U.K. journalism industry. On Tuesday, during live video testimony to the British government's Leveson Inquiry on press ethics …
Discussion:
Press Gazette, Broadcasting & Cable and FishbowlNY
The Sydney Morning Herald:
Piers Morgan quiet on McCartney voicemail — CNN star interviewer Piers Morgan has refused to disclose details about the most damning links between himself and Britain's phone hacking scandal - his acknowledgment that he once listened to a phone message left by Paul McCartney for his then-wife Heather Mills.
A.J. Daulerio / Deadspin:
Legendary Columnist Bill Conlin Resigns Over Forthcoming Philly Inquirer Bombshell — The Philadelphia Inquirer's top investigative reporter, Nancy Phillips, has written a story containing what we're told are allegations of child molestation against sportswriter Bill Conlin, a longtime columnist at the rival Daily News.
Discussion:
JIMROMENESKO.COM
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Guardian:
Bradley Manning hearing - live updates — • Pre-trial military hearing enters its fifth day in Maryland — • Prosecutors say evidence links Manning to Julian Assange — • At Forte Meade: Dominic Rushe (DR) and Matt Williams (MW) — • At the Guardian in New York: Adam Gabbatt
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Kim Zetter / Threat Level:
Jolt in WikiLeaks Case: Feds Found Manning-Assange Chat Logs on Laptop
Jolt in WikiLeaks Case: Feds Found Manning-Assange Chat Logs on Laptop
Discussion:
PBS, Guardian and Threat Level
Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
Leveson inquiry: Rupert Murdoch could be called — News Corporation chairman and chief executive could give evidence before the inquiry early next year — Rupert Murdoch, the chairman and chief executive of News Corporation, may be called to give evidence before the Leveson inquiry into ethics and standards in press.
Discussion:
AllThingsD
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Josh Halliday / Guardian:
News of the World publisher settles seven phone-hacking claims — Claims by Mark Oaten, Ulrika Jonsson, Abi Titmuss, Michelle Milburn, Paul Dadge, James Hewitt and Calum Best settled — News International said it had settled seven privacy claims against News Group Newspapers, the publisher of the now-defunct News of the World.
Discussion:
Media & Entertainment, Guardian and Journalism.co.uk
Ira Stoll / The Future of Capitalism:
The Times Shell Game — The New York Observer's Foster Kamer has a dispatch about how the New York Times has “bought out” several of its veteran employees, while retaining them as “contractors” to do the same jobs they were doing before. It quotes an email from Times staffer-turned-contractor Diana B. Henriques:
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Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
Katy Roberts, Jody Alesandro to leave ‘Times’ in buyout scheme
Katy Roberts, Jody Alesandro to leave ‘Times’ in buyout scheme
Discussion:
The New York Observer
Joel Simon / Committee to Protect Journalists:
Journalists killed: Inside the numbers — CPJ today released its annual tally of the journalists killed around the world. This is always a somber occasion for us as we chronicle the grim toll, remember friends who have been lost, and recommit ourselves to justice.
Discussion:
The Next Web, WebProNews and Guardian
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Nadira Isayeva / Guardian:
Khadzhimurad Kamalov: a death foreseen
Brian Beutler / TPM:
Ryan's Plan Still Ends Medicare Even If Politifact Rates That As A Lie — Ryan's Plan Still Ends Medicare Even If PolitiFact Rates That As A Lie — Here's a long, sad story about how Democrats' basically true claim that House Republicans voted to end Medicare ended up “winning” …
Discussion:
Slate, Mediaite, The Huffington Post, Washington Monthly, Forbes and PolitiFact
Paul Lamkin / Pocket-lint:
Netflix signs up BBC for UK launch — Auntie on board for streaming fun — Netflix has snapped up a digital licensing agreement with BBC Worldwide ahead of its arrival in the United Kingdom and Ireland, meaning access to the wealth of Beeb goodies. — The deal means shows such as Spooks …
Discussion:
VentureBeat, The Wrap, Home Media Magazine, Forbes, CNET News, paidContent, Softpedia News, Guardian and TechCrunch, more at Techmeme »
Jeff Roberts / paidContent:
Publishing Insider Tipped Law Firms About E-Book Price Fixing Conspiracy — The decision by major publishers to strike a pricing deal with Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) has been the source of speculation and several antitrust investigations. Now, a new court filing suggests someone inside the industry …
Greg Jarboe / Search Engine Watch:
Hulu Grew Audience by 23% Year on Year — Late last week, comScore Video Metrix released its November 2011 U.S. Online Video Rankings. The data showed that 183 million U.S. Internet users watched online video content that month for an average of 20.5 hours per viewer.
Ingrid Lunden / paidContent:
Millennial Media Says Kindle Fire Impressions Growing 19 Percent Each Day — We still don't have any exact figures from Amazon (NSDQ: AMZN) for how many Kindle Fire tablets it has sold, but the latest figures out from mobile ad network Millennial Media are the latest to suggest that it is selling very well …
Discussion:
Adweek, GigaOM, TechCrunch, CNET News, Softpedia News and eBookNewser, more at Techmeme »
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
On Word of Kim's Death, a Varied Response on Cable News — Rarely are the contrasts between CNN, the Fox News Channel and MSNBC as visible as they are on nights like Sunday, when the death of the North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il was reported. — CNN, which is best known for its news credentials …
Discussion:
The Atlantic Online, mediabistro.com, TVNewser, CJR, Hit & Run, The Boston Globe, Poynter, New York Times and The Lede
RELATED:
Dylan Stableford / Yahoo! News:
Newspapers in Europe cover death of Vaclav Havel, not Kim Jong-Il
Newspapers in Europe cover death of Vaclav Havel, not Kim Jong-Il
Discussion:
Inside