Top News:
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Police advised not to pursue prosecution of Guardian journalist — The Crown Prosecution Service has advised Scotland Yard that it is not in the public interest to pursue a prosecution against the Guardian journalist David Leigh for hacking a voicemail as part of an investigation into corrupt arms deals.
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Press Gazette
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Guardian:
David Cameron tells Leveson: alleged Tory plot with News Corp is nonsense — David Cameron has dismissed as “nonsense” the suggestion that the Conservatives promised to wave through News Corporation's bid for BSkyB in return for its papers' support at the 2010 general election.
Guido Fawkes:
Rebekah to Dave: “We're in this Together” — Tomorrow's papers have their headline. Here is what Rebekah Brooks texted Cameron on the eve of his 2009 conference speech:
Telegraph:
Phone Hacking: Sun reporter and prison officer among trio arrested in illegal payments inquiry — The men and a woman were arrested during dawn raids this morning at three separate addresses in Northamptonshire and London. The trio were held as part of Operation Elveden, Scotland Yard's inquiry into payments to public officials.
Justin Ellis / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Would you buy a .boston domain from The Boston Globe? — The Boston Globe wants to open up a new line of business: selling domain names. — The Globe is among a number of organizations that are vying for a new series of web suffixes like .yoga, .android, .hockey and .kindle.
Discussion:
Multichannel, eMedia Vitals, Wired, GigaOM, ICANN New gTLDs, TechCrunch, MediaNama, Pocket-lint, WWD Media Headlines, Reuters, Politico, The Verge and Poynter
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Ben Sisario / Media Decoder:
Digital Notes: Plans for a New .Music Suffix, but Who Will Own It?
Digital Notes: Plans for a New .Music Suffix, but Who Will Own It?
Discussion:
Betabeat, Billboard.Biz and New York Times
Kevin Morris / Daily Dot:
Reddit bans “The Atlantic,” “Businessweek,” others in major anti-spam move — Reddit just dropped the banhammer. — As of today, more than a half-dozen prominent websites have been banned from the massively popular link-sharing site, including digital publishing heavyweights The Atlantic and PhysOrg.
Discussion:
Poynter, eMedia Vitals, Mixed Media, The Verge, CNET, The Next Web, tumblr.thefjp.org and Mashable!
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Jessica Roy / Betabeat:
Reddit: Ban on Businessweek and The Atlantic Is Temporary
Reddit: Ban on Businessweek and The Atlantic Is Temporary
Discussion:
The FJP
Jeff Sonderman / Poynter:
Why your news organization's social media policy may be illegal — If Barrett Tryon does get fired today by Freedom Communications, as he expects, he may find the National Labor Relations Board has his back. — Tryon, a multimedia journalist at the Colorado Springs Gazette …
Discussion:
JD Supra
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Adrienne LaFrance / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Lessons from the Motor City: What New Orleans might expect when the printing presses slow — DETROIT — It was exactly the kind of story you want a newspaper for: In 2008, Detroit Free Press reporters uncovered a trove of incriminating text messages that ultimately led to the resignation …
Discussion:
GigaOM, Gannett Blog, NetNewsCheck Latest and Jack Lessenberry
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
CNN Is Ending John King's Political Show — The ailing cable news channel CNN on Wednesday abruptly ended “John King, USA,” its 6 p.m. political news program. — The program will be replaced at the end of the month by “The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer,” which will expand from two hours long to three hours.
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Apple, Time Inc. Solve Their Subscription Squabble — Apple and Time Inc. have settled their differences: The giant publisher is now selling subscriptions to its iPad magazines directly from the apps themselves. — If that seems like non-news, consider that it took the two companies two years to figure this out.
Ken Dilanian / Los Angeles Times:
Panetta denies classified Bin Laden information leaked to Hollywood — WASHINGTON - Disputing allegations by some Republican lawmakers, Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta denied Wednesday that any classified information or material was given to the Hollywood producers of a planned film …
Joe Flint / Los Angeles Times:
FCC: Cable operators can stop providing analog signals of local TV — FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski (Associated Press / June 12, 2012) — In a move that has upset the broadcast industry, the Federal Communications Commission said it will let lapse a rule that required cable operators to carry local television signals in analog.