Top News:
David Carr / New York Times:
Amazon Low Prices Disguise a High Cost — The Justice Department finally took aim at the monopolistic monolith that threatened to dominate the book industry. So imagine the shock when the bullet aimed at threats to competition went whizzing by Amazon — which not long ago had a 90 percent stranglehold …
Discussion:
New York Times and Digital Book World
RELATED:
Charlie Stross / Charlie's Diary:
What Amazon's ebook strategy means — It seems to me that a lot of folks in the previous discussion don't really understand quite what makes Amazon so interesting—and threatening, for that matter—to the publishing industry. — So I'm going to take a stab at explaining.
Discussion:
Jeff Jarvis, Beyond Search and Forbes
Alan Finder / New York Times:
E-Books Are Easier to Borrow, Just Be Prepared to Wait — As a technical matter, it's remarkably easy to borrow an e-book from your local library. But not if you want to take out the best-selling biography of Steven P. Jobs, the hero of the Internet age who helped lure tens of millions …
Discussion:
@mathewi
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
The News Cycle, From Fireworks to Fizzle — I DON'T remember how old I was when I first climbed up to the roof of my family's home in suburban Maryland. Eleven, maybe? Twelve? But I do remember what I saw up there. It was the night of the Fourth of July, and it was turning dark enough for the fireworks.
Discussion:
@jonathanwald, @chanders, @chanders and Forbes
Josh Feldman / Mediaite:
Fox News Mole Tells Howard Kurtz He Wanted To Leave But Got ‘Blackballed’ At Other Networks — Joe Muto, the “Fox News Mole,” sat down for an appearance with Howard Kurtz that aired on CNN's Reliable Sources today to recount his tales of working at Fox and explain why he went rogue.
Discussion:
TVNewser, Reliable Sources, Chickaboomer and JIMROMENESKO.COM
Joe Fassler / The Atlantic Online:
Can the Computers at Narrative Science Replace Paid Writers? — A look at new software that could transform journalism — In a few short years, we've learned to delegate all manner of tasks to computers. For music recommendations or driving directions or academic scouring, we readily turn to our clever machines.
John Plunkett / Guardian:
BBC has thrown in the towel over live sport, claims former executive — Sir Paul Fox says sport is seen as ‘below the salt’ as he voices fears 2012 will be the last Olympics the corporation covers — Former BBC managing director Sir Paul Fox has accused the corporation of losing …
Discussion:
MediaTel and The Daily Record
Andrew Goldman / New York Times:
Mika Brzezinski Refuses to Perk It Up — When I told my wife I was interviewing you, she said, “I like Mika because she's ornery, and all the other women on TV in the morning are so damn chipper.” — I proudly own that. I spent 20 years trying to be perky like the beauty queens on TV, and none of it ever worked.
Discussion:
Mediaite
David Allen Green / New Statesman:
The Times and NightJack: an anatomy of a failure — The story of how, in a string of managerial and legal lapses, the Times hacked NightJack and effectively misled the High Court. — The award-winning “NightJack” blogger was outed in 2009 by the Times of London.
Matt Buchanan / Buzzfeed:
The Origin Of #Long Things — Lately, we like reading long things that are not books. A lot, it seems. There are apps for reading them: Instapaper, Read It Later, Readability. Platforms for publishing them: Kindle Singles, The Atavist. And sites dedicated entirely to discovering …
Hamish McKenzie / PandoDaily:
It's Time to Stop Talking About the Death of Big Media — Last week one of our guest writers, Francisco Dao, published a post entitled “What Happens After We Kill Big Media?” In it, he breezily surmised that big media's “downfall is inevitable” and proceeded to grieve for its demise.
Mallary Jean Tenore / Poynter:
How journalists train to stay safe while covering hostile environments — Before he ever stepped foot in Iraq, Washington Post reporter Ed O'Keefe had already navigated his way through landmines, used a tourniquet to help an injured person, and been ambushed.