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6:10 AM ET, April 21, 2012

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Steve Myers / Poynter:
Departure of Disney exec sparks Twitter spat over crediting scoops  —  Reuters' Peter Lauria complained today that his company wasn't credited with breaking news that Rich Ross was stepping down as head of The Disney Co.'s movie studio.  Do seconds divide the best and the rest?
RELATED:
Jay Rosen:
Four Types of Scoops  —  Journalists tend to be obsessed with scoops, meaning: the first to break the news, and being seen as the first, which means getting credit for it among peers.  —  But not all scoops are created equal.  I see four main types.  The politics of credit-claiming vary …
David Weigel / Slate:   How “Breaking News” Broke the News
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Nick Denton wants to turn the online media world on its head  —  Over the past couple of months, Gawker Media founder Nick Denton has made it clear that he doesn't like blog comments very much, and that includes the ones on his own sites such as Gizmodo and Jezebel.
Discussion: The Corsair, @sheamus, @jamiemottram and @nsolis, Thanks:@mathewi
Ryan Chittum / CJR:
The NYT Goes Backward on Digital Ads  —  The New York Times Company's first quarter earnings, reported yesterday, left a lot to be desired.  —  About.com, the company's web-only content farm, continues to crater, weighing down the newspapers.  It lost nearly a a quarter of its revenue …
Discussion: Journalism.co.uk
RELATED:
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Boston Globe raises prices on 7-day delivery, but protects Sunday circulation  —  The Boston Globe raised prices on seven-day subscriptions but left Sunday-only subscriptions alone.  The latter, Jon Chesto reports, also include unlimited access to the Globe's digital edition and costs only slightly more …
Justin Elliott / ProPublica:
Meet the Media Companies Lobbying Against Transparency  —  News organizations cultivate a reputation for demanding transparency, whether by suing for access to government documents, dispatching camera crews to the doorsteps of recalcitrant politicians, or editorializing in favor of open government.
Discussion: @romenesko and @davidfolkenflik
Jeff John Roberts / paidContent:
NY tabloid's new South Asian section shows ‘local’ is cultural not geographic  —  What do local New Yorkers really want to read about?  Well, cricket and Bollywood, of course.  —  One of New York's longtime tabloids The Daily News has added a news section to its website called Desi that targets the city's large South Asian community.
MediaShift Idea Lab:
Pay Walls and Social Media Could Shift the Public Agenda  —  If conversations around digital journalism have been dominated by anything in the first quarter of 2012, it's probably been about subscriptions, also known as pay walls.  Walls are going up at the L.A. Times and Gannett papers, and getting higher at The New York Times.
RELATED:
Jamie Keene / The Verge:
Tablets the second most popular way to watch TV, says Viacom study  —  The second most popular way to watch TV is now on a tablet, with iPads leading the way, according to a study by US media giant Viacom.  The survey questioned 2,500 on where and how they watched full-length TV shows …
Discussion: Viacom, MediaPost and The Daily
Foster Kamer / The New York Observer:
Has The Fox Mole Really Been Blackballed from Media Jobs?  —  Just a few days after Gawker introduced their recent and short-lived foray into corporate espionage-cum-pranksterism in the form of The Fox News Mole, one Joe Muto found himself on CNN, speaking with Howard Kurtz on Reliable Sources about the week he'd just had.
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
Sebastian Junger is done with war reporting, but convenes journalists in the Bronx to learn to save each other's lives mid-combat  —  Sebastian Junger, the famous author-reporter, emerged from the 5-train station at the corner of Third Avenue and 149th Street in the Bronx at around 7:45 …
Discussion: Outside
Zack Whittaker / ZDNet:
YouTube faces massive music royalty bill in German copyright case  —  Summary: YouTube could face a massive royalties bill after a court case went against the video-sharing site.  The ruling also ruled that YouTube alone is responsible for its users' submissions.
 
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 More News: 
Jim Romenesko:
The story behind ‘one of the best op-ed pieces ever’
Michelle Quinn / Politico:
California: Bloggers should disclose political pay
Steven Rosenbaum / Fast Company:
Content Curators Are The New Superheros Of The Web
Howard Kurtz / The Daily Beast:
How Mitt Romney Beats the Press, Avoiding Most National Interviews
Discussion: Slate
 Earlier Picks: 
Business Week:
The DOJ's Publishing Lawsuit May Doom Digital Rights Management
 

 
From Techmeme:

Foo Yun Chee / Reuters:
Sources: EU may accept Apple's proposal to open its NFC payments tech to rivals, and may close its antitrust probe in May, letting Apple avoid hefty fines

Gaby Del Valle / The Verge:
The US Senate reauthorizes FISA's Section 702; some communication service providers had threatened to stop cooperating with the US government in case of a lapse

George Steer / Financial Times:
Nvidia closed down 10% on Friday, falling the most since March 2020 and losing more than $200B of its market value, as investors pull back from AI bets

 
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