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8:15 AM ET, August 2, 2012

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Craig Silverman / Poynter:
4 warning signs that a promising young writer may be developing dangerous habits  —  When it was merely a matter of self-plagiarism, some saw the coverage of Jonah Lehrer's transgressions as an overheated case of schadenfreude.  —  The fact that his previous books had previously come under fire …
Discussion: bookforum.com
RELATED:
Jeff Bercovici / Forbes:
Jonah Lehrer Was Going To Give A Speech On Ethics.  It's Canceled, Obviously.  —  Jonah Lehrer's fabrications have already cost him his gig at The New Yorker and an unknown number of future book sales, and now they're cutting into his lucrative sideline as a speaker.
Erik Wemple / Washington Post:
Writer dares to defend Jonah Lehrer  —  It wasn't just the research that made Michael Moynihan's gotcha piece on Jonah Lehrer so definitive.  Nor was it the evidence that he marshaled against Lehrer for those hard-to-trace quotes attributed to Bob Dylan in his book “Imagine:How Creativity Works.”
Washington Post:
The Washington Post Launches Crowdsourcing Platform  —  The Washington Post today announced it has launched a new platform for crowdsourcing.  “Crowd Sourced” is The Post's special feature that allows Post journalists to ask questions about today's concerns and begin a conversation about these issues.
Discussion: NetNewsCheck Latest
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Time Out listings magazine goes free  —  Reviews and events mag begun in 1968 looks to advertising revenue based on circulation boost to 300,000  —  Almost 45 years after Tony Elliott launched Time Out, charging a shilling an issue, the grandaddy of listings magazines is set to be reborn …
Discussion: Digital Spy and paidContent
Nieman Journalism Lab:
The Verge is giving extra credit (and links) to primary sources  —  When technology site The Verge site launched last fall, Josh wrote a broadly laudatory review on the site's design and infrastructure.  We had one quibble, though, about how The Verge gave credit to other sites …
Liz Gannes / AllThingsD:
A Further Blow to Online Lurking: Quora Will Now Publicly Show Who Has Read a Post  —  Quora today is introducing a feature that shows which of its users have read each Quora post, and how they found it.  It's another move by a social Web service to share passive activities …
Jeff Bercovici / Forbes:
Time Warner's New Strategy For CNN: To Find a New Strategy  —  Does Time Warner have a programming strategy for CNN at the ready to replace the failed one pursued by departing worldwide president Jim Walton?  It sure didn't sound like it on the media conglomerate's second-quarter earnings call.
RELATED:
Michael Wolff / Guardian:
So, what's next for CNN?
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Newspaper Association of America shows new trends in paywalls  —  The Newspaper Association of America recently examined 156 newspapers that have enacted some kind of paywall on their website.  The data itself is for members only, but the NAA gave us a look.  A few stats:
Discussion: 10,000 Words and Poynter
Andrew Das / New York Times:
How Swimming Photographers Make Their Underwater Moment  —  LONDON — As Al Bello struggles to wedge his lean body into his scuba gear, it appears that taking the photographs has to be the easy part.  —  Bello pulls the skintight black shirt over his shoulders, tugs the legs of his shorts closer …
Discussion: SND, PAPERMAG, AdAge and Deadspin
Rebecca Greenfield / The Atlantic Wire:
HBO, Here Are Those Cord-Cutting Stats You Asked For  —  Time Warner will never offer HBO Go as a standalone streaming service because it's not what the people want, says CEO Jeff Bewkes, asking us to look at the data, which he claims proves there aren't that many cord-cutters.
Discussion: AllThingsD, Gizmodo and The Verge
Charlie Warzel / Adweek:
So How Are the Olympics Performing Online?  NBC Won't Say Neither will comScore, Nielsen, or anybody else just yet  —  Five days into the Olympics and here is what we know: NBC is pretty consistently killing it with its TV ratings, beating its Beijing numbers four nights in a row.
RELATED:
Dylan Stableford / Yahoo! News:
Jose Canseco hired as a paid columnist by Vice  —  Vice, the irreverent, Brooklyn-based magazine-turned-multiplatform media brand, has hired Jose Canseco—former professional baseball player-turned-outspoken author and Twitter user—as a paid weekly columnist for its website.
Andrew Wallenstein / Variety:
Olympics streaming saps Netflix traffic  —  25% drop could confirm Hastings' 3Q fears  —  It turns out Netflix may not have been paranoid after all about the threat posed by the Olympics to its streaming business.  —  Streaming activity for the Los Gatos, Calif.-based company dropped 25% …
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Is Twitter a publisher or a distributor?  There's a crucial difference  —  There are a whole host of issues raised by the case of Guy Adams, the British journalist whose Twitter account was recently suspended and then reinstated — including the potential clash between Twitter's desire …
Discussion: MediaShift and Washington Post
RELATED:
Guy Adams / The Independent:
Twitter backs down at last - but why did I get banned?
Discussion: Erik Wemple, Poynter and MediaFile
 
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 More News: 
Gavin Polone / Vulture:
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 Earlier Picks: 
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The Huffington Post:
2012 Election Gaffes Fuel Media Obsession, Leading To Scripted Campaigns
Roy Greenslade / Guardian:
How the Financial Times achieved a digital milestone
Discussion: CJR, The Verge and Media Week