Top News:
Amy Chozick / Media Decoder:
The Times Names a New Deputy Managing Editor — The New York Times said Tuesday that it was promoting its longtime design director, Tom Bodkin, to deputy managing editor, the latest change to the masthead since Jill Abramson took over as executive editor in September.
Discussion:
FishbowlNY and The Huffington Post
RELATED:
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:
New York Times Staffers Express ‘Profound Dismay’ With Management — NEW YORK — New York Times staffers unhappy with management are letting publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. know it. In recent days, more than 270 current and former Times employees have signed an open letter expressing their …
Discussion:
saveourtimes.com
John Biggs / New York Times:
A Dispute Over Who Owns a Twitter Account Goes to Court — How much is a tweet worth? And how much does a Twitter follower cost? — In base economic terms, the value of individual Twitter updates seems to be negligible; after all, what is a Twitter post but a few bits of data sent caroming through the Internet?
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Mediaite, ReadWriteWeb, Softpedia News, CNET, WebProNews, The Next Web, VatorNews, Selling It, Marketing Pilgrim and Betabeat
CNN:
Swedish journalists receive 11 years in jail — (CNN) — Two Swedish journalists who were found guilty in Ethiopia of supporting terrorism were sentenced to 11 years in jail Tuesday, the Swedish Foreign Ministry said. — “Our belief was that the court would think they were journalists and they would be released.
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Clara Guibourg / The Local:
Swedish editor charged with weapons crimes — Thomas Mattsson, editor-in-chief of one of Sweden's largest newspapers, has been charged for instigating a weapons offense. Mattsson heads the Expressen daily newspaper, and in the fall of 2010 he gave one of the newspaper's reporters permission …
DARREN MURPH:
Chris Grant is leaving Joystiq, and other crazy clarifications / confessions — It's true. One of the most upstanding people I've ever had the pleasure to work alongside of is leaving Joystiq at the end of this year, and he's taking two of his confidants with him.
RELATED:
Kevin Lincoln / Business Insider:
AOL Loses Another Star Editor To Jim Bankoff's Growing Media Empire
AOL Loses Another Star Editor To Jim Bankoff's Growing Media Empire
Discussion:
Joystiq
Jordan Kahn / 9to5Mac:
DigiTimes: Apple iTV to launch as 32- and 37-inch models in summer 2012 — Citing their usual industry sources within the Asian supply chain, DigiTimes claimed Dec. 27 that Apple is prepping an HDTV for a summer 2012 launch that will be initially available in 32-inch and 37-inch variants.
Discussion:
AllThingsD, DigiTimes, VentureBeat, GigaOM, Future of Journalism and Techland, more at Techmeme »
Hermione Way / The Next Web:
‘Olive’: The first cinema film shot on smartphone, but will it democratize Hollywood? — Last week I was invited to a private screening of Olive - The first cinematic-quality feature film to be shot entirely on a smartphone. First-time director Hooman Khalili used a Nokia N8 cellphone …
Arik Hesseldahl / AllThingsD:
Obama Likes the Internet, So He'll Probably Veto SOPA if It Gets That Far — Unless there's a really big shift in sentiment among members of Congress on both sides of the ideological aisle, some version of the Stop Online Piracy Act is going to be passed by Congress sometime in 2012.
Jim Romenesko:
New York Times drops many podcasts — “The New York Times has decided to get out of the podcast business,” listeners of The Caucus podcast were told last week. That's not exactly right, I'm told. “Yes, we're re-evaluating our podcast schedule for the coming year,” a Times spokeswoman tells me.
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Afghanistan Low on News Agenda — The 10-year-old war in Afghanistan remained just a blip on the American news media's radar in 2011. — Of all the news content in newspapers and on the Web, television and radio this year, Afghanistan accounted for about 2 percent of coverage …
Discussion:
Forbes and The Politico
Daniel Bardsley / The National:
Journalists fighting an information war in secretive North Korea — SEOUL // Hunched over, staring at their computer screens, the dozen or so journalists in this cramped office in north-west Seoul collect the latest reports for their online news service about one of the world's most secretive countries.