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7:15 AM ET, July 8, 2012

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Joel Schectman / The CIO Report:
NBC, Google, Stage ‘War Games’ To Prepare for Olympic Disruptions  —  NBC and Google are conducting “war games” in at least three countries, to prepare for the possibility of hacker attacks or hardware malfunction disrupting the online streaming of the Summer Olympics Games in London, which start this month.
Discussion: Mashable!
David Folkenflik / NPR:
Fake Bylines Reveal Hidden Costs Of Local News … Newspapers acknowledged publishing dozens of items in print or online from outsourcing firm Journatic that appeared under fake bylines.  The Chicago Tribune, for example, said the matter is under investigation.
Discussion: Poynter
RELATED:
Ryan Smith / Guardian:
My adventures in Journatic's new media landscape of outsourced hyperlocal news
Jack Shafer:   How the byline beast was born
Jules Stenson / The Huffington Post:
There Is Life After The News of the World  —  It lasted little more than two minutes and, like the best News of the World splashes, was executed with brutal finality.  Without any warning, we were called from our desks to the centre of the newsroom where Rebekah Brooks was waiting for us with our editor Colin Myler alongside her.
Craig Silverman / Poynter:
After much fanfare, Daily Mail's corrections column loses steam  —  Last October, Daily Mail editor-in-chief Paul Dacre made a strong stand for transparency: “I believe corrections must be given more prominence,” he told the Leveson Inquiry that's looking into the phone hacking scandal and also examining …
Jeff Jarvis / BuzzMachine:
Can we reimagine TV news (please)?  —  With his bizarro news network, Aaron Sorkin thinks he is reimagining TV news, but he is only reminiscing, wishing for the return of the mythical Uncle Walter who'll tell us all what's what.  Truth is, the process we saw at work in the premier of The Newsroom …
Jonathan Peters / Slate:
The Supreme Court Leaks  —  The high court has a long and storied history of dishing on itself.  —  The Supreme Court isn't supposed to be like other institutions.  It's supposed to be something more, a place above partisan squabbling, insulated from the unseemly back and forth of politics.
Mariah Blake / CJR:
Something fishy?  —  John Solomon had grand plans for the digital future of the Center for Public Integrity.  But there was always a catch...  When John Solomon took over as executive editor of The Washington Times in 2008, the conservative daily had long been propped up on subsidies …
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The newsonomics of the only metric that matters  —  Amid the big news of the News Corp. split, The New York Times announced its deal with Flipboard.  Then, the next day, The Wall Street Journal reported its own deal with Pulse.  It looked like Tablet Aggregator Wars, with the two big head …
Discussion: Forbes Real Time
Daniel R. Schwarz / The Huffington Post:
Why, as the Gates of Newsgathering Information Have Been Opening, the Minds of Its Audience Have Been Closing?  —  In examining the radical changes in the dissemination of news, we need to examine not only how newspaper and news media are evolving from providing historically accurate records …
Discussion: @mathewi
Peter Sterne / CJR:
Gawker's new comment system  —  Will it help or hurt the site's young writers?  —  Gawker Media publisher Nick Denton recently introduced a new commenting system, called Kinja, on his network of websites.  Rather than showing all comments on a given article, Kinja shows only the most interesting thread of comments and replies.
Discussion: JIMROMENESKO.COM
Adrienne LaFrance / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Save your darlings: Blank on Blank gives new life to old tape  —  As journalists, we are taught early to “kill your darlings.”  —  The material may be punchy, savory, heartbreaking, or hilarious, but if it's not necessary for the story — or if it's redundant or tangential …
Discussion: Mediaite
Jeremy W. Peters / New York Times:
Journal Critique of Romney Shows Murdoch Doubt on Candidacy  —  To hear Rupert Murdoch tell it lately, Mitt Romney lacks stomach and heart.  He “seems to play everything safe.”  And he is not nearly as tough as he needs to be on President Obama.  —  Mr. Murdoch's thoughts on the Republican presidential candidate's prospects?
 
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 More News: 
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Email exchange with fictional character leads to New York Times correction
Erica Orden / Wall Street Journal:
Movie Studios Spar Over WikiLeaks
John Jannarone / Wall Street Journal:
Comcast Nears Deal to Sell A&E Stake
Discussion: Multichannel
Jeanine Poggi / AdAge:
Netflix's Billion-Hour June: Big, Just Not Quite as Big as You Think
 Earlier Picks: 
Sarah Marshall / Journalism.co.uk:
BBC global news chief on trust: ‘If they believe us, they will share it’
Discussion: bbc.co.uk and BBC
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Why links matter: Linking is the lifeblood of the web
Discussion: AllThingsD, VentureBeat and Fortune
Alan Prendergast / Westword:
Armando Montano: Account of “accidental” finding in journalist's death disputed
Discussion: JIMROMENESKO.COM