Top News:
Guardian:
Sky News admits hacking emails of ‘canoe man’ — Sky News has admitted that one of its senior executives authorised a journalist to conduct email hacking on two separate occasions that it said were “in the public interest” - even though intercepting emails is a prima facie breach of the Computer Misuse Act …
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Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
Assange: PCC stood by as I was libelled — WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has launched an attack on the Press Complaints Commission, claiming he has been subjected to inaccurate and negative media coverage “possibly on a scale not seen since the abuse of the McCanns”.
Discussion:
Journalism.co.uk
John Ryley / Sky News:
A CASE OF DOUBLE STANDARDS? — The Guardian today published an appraisal of a story story broadcast by Sky News almost four years ago. In the 2008 case of Anne Darwin, whose “canoe man” husband John Darwin faked his own death as part of an insurance fraud, we provided the police with emails …
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
NoW closure cost Murdoch nearly £250m
Peter Lauria / Reuters:
Exclusive: Low ratings could end cable deal for Gore's Current TV — Al Gore's Current TV has bigger problems to deal with than a potential lawsuit from fired news anchor Keith Olbermann - namely not getting kicked off Time Warner Cable for low ratings. According to three sources with knowledge …
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, The New York Observer, Business Insider, TVbytheNumbers, The Raw Story and Chickaboomer
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Court Says Viacom vs. YouTube Copyright Fight Will Go Another Round — The long-running Viacom versus YouTube copyright fight will keep going a while longer: A federal court has overturned an earlier victory for Google and its giant video site, and has ordered the two sides to retry the case.
Discussion:
TechCrunch, CNET, Techdirt, Hillicon Valley, The Next Web, Marketing Pilgrim, Free Press and Company Town
Ingrid Lunden / TechCrunch:
Amazon Goes Bilingual In The U.S. Kindle Store With Launch Of Spanish ‘Tienda Kindle’ — Amazon has been making some big strides in extending its footprint outside of the U.S. with its Kindle e-readers and Kindle bookstore, but today it took a step to improve how it caters to Spanish speakers closer to home …
Discussion:
paidContent, Pew Internet, Amazon.com, PC Magazine, VatorNews, CNET and The Next Web
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Brian Stelter / New York Times:
Huffington Gains More Control in AOL Revamping — One year after its acquisition by AOL, The Huffington Post has become a source of growth for the beleaguered company, which is still trying to shed its dial-up Internet image. Now, in what Arianna Huffington characterizes as a move to keep …
Discussion:
Media Decoder, FishbowlNY, GigaOM, Digiday, TVNewser and @mathewi
Jeff Bercovici / Mixed Media:
Julian Assange's Talk Show Debuts Next Week; Watch the Promo — Wikileaks founder Julian Assange has been known to make big promises that don't always pan out, but his plan to host a current events talk show on “Russia Today” doesn't seem to be one of them.
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Google: No more e-books for indie booksellers — Google is ending the program that allows independent booksellers to sell Google e-books through their websites. It is a big blow for small bookstores seeking to compete against Amazon and Barnes & Noble. — The full letter that the American …
Discussion:
Google Book Search Blog, Wired and Publishers Lunch
Adrienne LaFrance / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Wait — so how many newspapers have paywalls? — It can be hard to measure something that keeps growing. — Just over two weeks ago, the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism reported that there are roughly 150 dailies in the United States that now have some form of digital subscription service.
Andrew Phelps / Nieman Journalism Lab:
A new framework for innovation in journalism: How a computer scientist would do it — What if journalism were invented today? How would a computer scientist go about building it, improving it, iterating it? — He might start by mapping out some fundamental questions: What are the project's values and goals?
Discussion:
Tow-Knight, BuzzMachine and Nick Diakopoulos
Newsosaur / Reflections of a Newsosaur:
Newsroom staffing hits 34-year low — The number of journalists working at U.S. newspapers today is at the lowest point since the American Society of News Editors began its annual newsroom census in 1978. — Newspapers now employ 40,600 editors and reporters vs. a peak of 56,900 …
Discussion:
AAJA Online, Media News, rjionline.org, Jon Slattery, Gannett Blog and Poynter
Associated Press:
USA Today Begins More Staff Furloughs To Cut Costs — McLEAN, Va. (AP) — USA Today is requiring most of its staff to take an unpaid week off to save money, as the nation's second-largest newspaper struggles to sell more advertising. The furloughs, which were announced Wednesday …
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Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Bill Marimow will take new approach to old job as Philadelphia Inquirer editor — Bill Marimow says his demotion in 2010 from Philadelphia Inquirer editor to reporter was “revelatory” because it allowed him to return full-time to reporting, the job for which he won Pulitzer prizes in the '70s and '80s.
Discussion:
JIMROMENESKO.COM and Gawker
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John Hudson / The Atlantic Wire:
Ben Smith: What I Read — How do people deal with the torrent of information pouring down on us all? What sources can't they live without? We regularly reach out to prominent figures in media, entertainment, politics, the arts and the literary world, to hear their answers.
Wall Street Journal:
Settlement Near on E-Book Pricing — Talks to resolve U.S. and European price-fixing probes into e-books are heating up, with three international publishers inclined to settle the matter, according to people familiar with the matter. — Apple Inc., another target of the investigation …
Discussion:
CNET, Wired, Thad McIlroy, Melville House Books, Bookseller news and Hillicon Valley
Josh Sternberg / Digiday:
USA Today Bets on Adaptive Mobile — Newspapers are experimenting with different ways of distributing content on tablets. When it comes to mobile, most publications rush to replicate their content via an app. USA Today is thinking different. — USA Today is betting on an adaptive experience that morphs with the device.