Top News:
John Fahey / Press Association:
Milly Dowler's deleted messages to stay a mystery — The truth about how murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler's phone messages were deleted may never emerge, the Leveson Inquiry heard today. The now defunct News of the World admitted hacking the 13-year-old's mobile phone but it remains unknown whether …
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Guardian:
Rupert Murdoch's big backer sounds News Corp warning — Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, the second-biggest shareholder in Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation, has revealed his frustration with the fallout from the News of the World phone-hacking scandal and admitted that it is harming the reputation …
Discussion:
Guardian, New York Magazine, Media Matters for America, Hillicon Valley, Guardian and The Times
Roy Greenslade / Guardian:
News International misses another accounting deadline — News International has missed another deadline to file its accounts with Companies House. — The company, which trades under the name of NI Group Ltd, is now facing a fine for failing to comply with the legal requirement to post its accounts for the year up to 30 June 2011.
Patrick Wintour / Guardian:
David Cameron texted Rebekah Brooks before she quit NI, claims biography
Sarah Lacy / PandoDaily:
Sources Say AOL Seeking Buyers for Engadget and TechCrunch. Arrington “Not In The Least Bit Interested” — We weren't sure about this one at first, but now we have two independent sources confirming that AOL is exploring the sale of its cornerstone technology sites Engadget and TechCrunch.
Discussion:
Poynter, Business Insider and Betabeat
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Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
AOL Offers Up an Earnings Beat, But a Disappointing Ad Number — First look at AOL's earnings: Revenue of $529 million and earnings of 22 cents a share. Wall Street was looking for $527 million and 7 cents a share. — The earnings beat is nice for AOL.
Discussion:
Business Insider and @pkafka
Betsy Rothstein / FishbowlDC:
An Editor's Dangerous Mea Culpa — In a most unusual editor's note on the Chronicle of Higher Education website last night, Editor Liz McMillen apologizes profusely for what turned out to be a controversial post written by now fired “Brainstorm” blogger, former WSJ editor and Harvard graduate Naomi Schaefer Riley.
Discussion:
GalleyCat
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Craig Silverman / Poynter:
Writer fired by Chronicle of Higher Ed: ‘The vitriolic reaction is kind of surprising’
Writer fired by Chronicle of Higher Ed: ‘The vitriolic reaction is kind of surprising’
Discussion:
Hit & Run, Brainstorm, Wall Street Journal, Mother Jones and Le·gal In·sur·rec· tion
Christopher Shea / Wall St Journal:
Chronicle of an Academic-Media Firestorm
Chronicle of an Academic-Media Firestorm
Discussion:
msnbc.com, ArtsBeat and MetaFilter
Reuters:
Romeo Langlois: Colombia Won't Negotiate With FARC Rebels Over Kidnapped French Reporter — Colombia on Tuesday rejected a call by FARC rebels to debate freedom of information and news media bias as a condition for the release of a French reporter they hold hostage.
Discussion:
BBC
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Elyssa Pachico / Christian Science Monitor:
Is French journalist kidnapped in Colombia a prisoner of war?
Is French journalist kidnapped in Colombia a prisoner of war?
Discussion:
Colombia Reports
Keach Hagey / Digits:
LA Times Developer Begins Archiving Newspaper Websites — Newspaper front pages are considered such an important mirror of American culture that they get their own rotating daily museum exhibit at the Newseum in Washington, D.C. — But there has never been an equivalent archive for the more ephemeral …
Discussion:
Poynter
Adrienne LaFrance / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Ongo, an attempt at a pan-media paywalled aggregator, is closing — Less than a year and a half after launch, the subscription aggregation startup Ongo — a newspaper-industry effort to create a pan-media subscription system — is shutting down. It'll close its doors by month's end …
Discussion:
paidContent, eMedia Vitals, AllThingsD and @rafat
Dan Mitchell / SF Weekly:
Desperate Newspapers Pin Hopes on Annoyed Readers — News publishers have always treated readers like commodities — because that's what readers are. The real customers for publishers aren't readers, but advertisers. Readers are the product. It's not quite that simple, of course …
Discussion:
Mashable!, eMedia Vitals and Zombie Journalism
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Justin Ellis / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The Guardian: Yep, it was “major changes” by Facebook that caused drop in social reader traffic
The Guardian: Yep, it was “major changes” by Facebook that caused drop in social reader traffic
Discussion:
Digits, TheMediaBriefing, The FJP and Poynter
Farhad Manjoo / PandoDaily:
Nobody Seems to Understand What Jeff Bezos is Doing. Does He? — A couple months ago, realizing it would be futile to hold out any longer against the tsunami of pop cultural peer pressure, I decided to go ahead and read The Hunger Games. I jumped over to Amazon, searched for the Kindle edition …
Discussion:
GeekWire and Business Insider
Maurice Chammah / The Huffington Post:
Should Journalists Be Protected? — Thursday was World Press Freedom Day. On Friday, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CJP) published an article listing the arrests, injuries, and assaults of at least eighteen journalists covering recent clashes near the Egyptian Ministry of Defense.
Discussion:
World Now
Gail Shister / The Philly Post:
Wendy Ruderman Talks About Why She's Leaving the Daily News — How bad are things at the Daily News? New York Times-bound Wendy Ruderman, a 2010 Pulitzer Prize winner, is urging her colleagues to jump ship. “I hate to say it, but if people at the Daily News aren't looking, they should be …
Discussion:
JIMROMENESKO.COM
Brooks Barnes / Media Decoder:
ESPN and Theme Parks Drive Disney Profits — LOS ANGELES — Climbing ad sales and subscription fees at ESPN and cable channels like ABC Family helped the Walt Disney Company increase its quarterly profit by 21 percent from a year earlier, to $1.14 billion. — Disney's financial results …
Discussion:
The Wrap, Company Town, paidContent, Multichannel, Home Media Magazine, Forbes and LA Biz Observed