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3:12 AM ET, February 5, 2012

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Business Insider:
The Incredible Shrinking New York Times  —  The New York Times just reported its fourth-quarter results to finish out 2011.  —  And it's still shrinking.  —  Despite the launch of an online paywall that has, by any measure, been a big success, the company's revenue for its core news business shrank again in 2011.
RELATED:
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
The NYT needs a lot more than just a paywall  —  If there was a bright spot in the latest quarterly results from the New York Times, it's the fact that the newspaper's metered paywall has attracted almost 325,000 subscribers willing to pay a monthly fee for the site.
NPR:
How Online Paywalls Are Changing Journalism
Discussion: TechCrunch and NetNewsCheck Latest
Andy Plesser / Beet.TV:
Arianna Huffington's Vision of Interactive Video Journalism  —  The Huffington Post, which has galvanized a massive community of millions of content creators who engage via comments, “likes,” tweets and thousands of guest blog posts, will soon participate in an ambitious linear video network …
Discussion: FishbowlNY and TVexchanger.com, Thanks:@beet_tv
RELATED:
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Watch Out, TV: AOL and HuffPo Jump Into Live Video  —  AOL and The Huffington Post are readying a live video network that will have twelve hours of programming every weekday when it starts this summer.  —  The network, which is currently named The Huffington Post Streaming Network …
The Authors Guild Blog:
Publishing's Ecosystem on the Brink: The Backstory  —  [Update, February 2, 2012: There have been some comments here and elsewhere questioning the accuracy of a sentence in this blog post that we excerpted from Barry Lynn's “Killing the Competition” Harper's piece.
Discussion: O'Reilly Radar and Forbes
RELATED:
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Random House Will Keep All Its E-Books In Libraries, With A Price Increase
Steve Myers / Poynter:
Sacramento Bee fires Bryan Patrick for photo manipulation  —  The Sacramento Bee fired award-winning photographer Bryan Patrick Friday after finding three cases, going back to 2009, in which he digitally manipulated photographs.  —  Patrick was suspended earlier this week when a reader raised questions …
Discussion: Sacramento Bee and FishbowlLA
Stuart Elliott / New York Times:
Before the Toss, Super Bowl Ads  —  The Super Bowl has long been the biggest day of the year for advertising, as more than 100 million Americans watch television's most expensive and daring commercials.  Unlike years past, one thing will be mostly missing this year: surprise.
Julie Moos / Poynter:
Halifax lays off more than half of staff reporting to former NYT Regional HQ in Tampa  —  About 30 employees of the former New York Times Regional Media Group were notified Friday that their new employer, Halifax Media Group, has decided to lay them off and offer severance packages.
Lauren Dugan / AllTwitter:
Biz Stone Clarifies Twitter's Stance On Censorship And China  —  This guest post comes to us from tech blogger Will M. You can follow Will at @BetterPath.  —  “They should have asked me write that,” Biz Stone says about a blog post on Twitter.com that set off a global controversy.
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Apple Tweaks iBook Language: Your Content Is Your Content  —  A couple weeks after introducing its new iBooks Author app, Apple has clarified legal language about what happens to books users create with the software.  Apple continues to insist that users can only sell electronic books in the iBook format via its iTunes store.
Mark Thompson / BBC:
The harassment of BBC Persian journalists  —  For those working for the BBC Persian service, interference and harassment from the Iranian authorities has become a challenging fact of life.  —  I am hugely proud of how they deal with that relentless pressure, and their unswerving commitment …
Maryclaire Dale / Associated Press:
Business mogul mulls new bid for Philly newspapers  —  Business mogul Raymond Perelman is mulling another bid for Philadelphia's two largest newspapers, more than a year after creditors outbid him at a bankruptcy auction.  Perelman bid $129 million, mostly cash, for The Philadelphia Inquirer …
 
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 More News: 
Drew Olanoff / The Next Web:
Twitter prepares for election coverage by setting up an account aimed at journalists
Discussion: The Wall Blog and AllTwitter
Wall Street Journal:
Advertisers' Free Ride May End On Facebook
Discussion: WebProNews and Marketing Pilgrim
 Earlier Picks: 
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
Reuters staff vote for first strike in 25 years
Discussion: Press Gazette
Malavika Sharma / Bloomberg:
Amazon Starts India Shopping Service as Internet Market Grows
Discussion: ZDNet, Reuters, BBC and Wall Street Journal