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6:30 PM ET, March 26, 2012

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
For Martin's Case, a Long Route to National Attention  —  Trayvon Martin, an unarmed 17-year-old, was fatally shot on Feb. 26 in Sanford, Fla. The next day his death was a top story on the Fox-affiliated television station in Orlando, the closest big city to Sanford.
RELATED:
Howard Kurtz / The Daily Beast:
Al Sharpton's Conflicting Roles in the Trayvon Martin Case  —  He leads a Trayvon Martin rally and covers it for MSNBC.  —  Al Sharpton, who has been crusading in racial cases for three decades, has claimed a starring role in the Trayvon Martin case.  —  He's also assumed a starring role in MSNBC's coverage of the case.
Ryan Chittum / CJR:
Sourcing Trayvon Martin “Photos” From Stormfront  —  Business Insider runs a linkbait post with a graphic of Trayvon Martin images it found on the neonazi website Stormfront.  —  It doesn't run them to debunk them, mind you, but to back up its thesis that “The Media Is Getting the Trayvon Martin Story Wrong …
Jeff Sonderman / Poynter:
ESPN drops ban on staff posting pics in hoodies
Discussion: The Wrap and The Maynard Institute
Patrick B. Pexton / Washington Post:
Is a paywall coming to The Washington Post?  —  Will you soon have to start paying to use The Post's Web site?  No, not in the short term, and maybe never, if I read the tea leaves correctly.  Paying for online or digital content (called a “paywall” in media jargon) is much in the news right …
RELATED:
Frédéric Filloux / Monday Note:
The “Sharing” Mirage  —  This week's most stunning statistic: In February, Facebook drove more traffic to the Guardian web site than Google did.  This fact was proffered (I couldn't bring myself to write shared) at the Changing Medias Summit Conference by Tanya Corduroy …
Discussion: Guardian
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Don't build a paywall, create a velvet rope instead  —  As the newspaper industry continues to flounder, paywalls and other subscription models are becoming more common, with everyone trying to imitate the New York Times or the Wall Street Journal.  Is there any other other option to putting up a turnstile around the news?
Sarah Marshall / Journalism.co.uk:   Mission America: How the Guardian's US move has added 4m readers
Jim Romenesko:
Philly.com 'doesn't much like news'  —  Former Philadelphia Inquirer metro columnist Tom Ferrick calls Philly.com “an anomaly among the newspaper-related web sites in America in that it doesn't much like news.”  The people behind the site know they can't get millions of unique visitors with news stories …
RELATED:
Dave Davies / newsworks:
More layoffs coming at Philly papers?  —  I really, really don't want to write this.  But I've learned from a credible source that the management of Philadelphia Media Network, which owns the Inquirer, Daily News and Philly.com, envisions dumping another 35 people from the payroll over the next six months.
Discussion: Poynter
Lauren Collins / New Yorker:
How the Daily Mail conquered England.  —  On Thursday, January 19th, the front page of the Daily Mail carried a story about Sir Fred Goodwin, the former chief executive of the Royal Bank of Scotland.  During Goodwin's tenure, from 2000 to 2008, R.B.S. quadrupled its assets …
RELATED:
Dominic Rushe / Guardian:   Daily Mail editor Paul Dacre: American press ‘complacent’ and ‘self-regarding’
Dylan Byers / Politico:
Santorum ‘ready to take on the NY Times’  —  My colleague Maggie Haberman reports late Sunday night: Rick Santorum's line earlier in his speech in Wisconsin tonight - about Mitt Romney being the “worst” Republican in the country to put up against President Obama - is a version he's used …
RELATED:
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
Daily Telegraph publisher's chief attended Downing Street dinner  —  Murdoch MacLennan went to ‘thank-you dinner for major donors’ two months after 2010 general election  —  Murdoch MacLennan, chief executive of the publisher behind the Daily Telegraph, attended a previously undisclosed …
Discussion: Media Week and Press Gazette
RELATED:
Lauren Indvik / Mashable!:
Why Do Magazines Look So Terrible on the iPad 3?  —  As with any high-profile product release, Apple's new iPad device has been peppered with complaints since reaching consumers' hands on March 16.  Among them: that magazines look terrible on the iPad 3′s high-resolution display.
 
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 More News: 
Emil Protalinski / Zero Day Blog:
Al Arabiya Facebook Page hacked, fake Syria news posted
Discussion: The Next Web
Christopher Robbins / Gothamist:
Gothamist Finally Gets Press Passes (After 8 Years and Thousands Spent on High-Profile Lawyer)
Michael D. Shear / New York Times:
Washington Memo: Supreme Court Goes Predigital for Health Law Arguments
Discussion: The Week, The Caucus and CNN
Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
Leveson inquiry: Met police may have to log all press meetings
Discussion: Journalism.co.uk and Telegraph
Ed Pilkington / Guardian:
New media gurus launch Upworthy - their ‘super basic’ internet start-up
Discussion: Upworthy and The Filter Bubble
 Earlier Picks: 
Paul McNally / Journalism.co.uk:
Crowd-funded tech journalism project Matter raises $140k
Ki Mae Heussner / Adweek:
Does the Web Need Another Tech Site? eHow Says Yes
Ben Fritz / Company Town:
Internet to surpass DVD in movie consumption, not revenue
Discussion: WebProNews
Howard Owens:
Paywalls create opportunities for local news entrepreneurs
Discussion: Street Fight
Mike Daisey:
Some Thoughts After The Storm
 

 
From Techmeme:

Alex Heath / The Verge:
Meta details Llama 3: 8B- and 70B-parameter models, a focus on reducing false refusals, and an upcoming model trained on 15T+ tokens that has 400B+ parameters

Raffaele Huang / Wall Street Journal:
Apple removes WhatsApp and Threads from its App Store in China, saying it was ordered to do so by China's cyberspace officials citing national security concerns

Ryan Morrison / Tom's Guide:
Microsoft researchers introduce VASA-1, an AI model that creates a realistic talking face video from a portrait photo and an audio file, in research preview

 
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