Top News:
Jeff Sonderman / Poynter:
How the media handled graphic images of Empire State Building shooting — When today's deadly shooting occurred in the heart of Manhattan, thousands of witnesses were nearby and many used cameras to quickly document the scene. Some of the images posted to Twitter, Instagram and Flickr included graphic photos of the shooting victims.
Discussion:
Yahoo! News, Gawker, Associated Press, New York Post, nbcnewyork.com, New York Times, New Yorker, New York Magazine, Betabeat, Guardian, Featured stories, Gothamist and Mediaite
RELATED:
Bernie Bernstein / On The Media:
The Story of the Times' Gory Empire State Shooting Photo — If you went on the New York Times' site this morning to read about news of the Empire State building shooting, you might have seen this haunting photo of one of the victims of the shooting, Steve Ercolino.
Discussion:
Guardian and The Huffington Post
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
New York Times explains graphic photo from Empire State Building shooting — The New York Times explains the graphic photo (shown below) on its home page that illustrates coverage of Friday's deadly shooting at the Empire State Building. — “It is an extremely graphic image and we understand …
Discussion:
Gawker, The Atlantic Wire, The Huffington Post, Mediaite, Branch, The Onion and @carr2n
Andrew Gill / WBEZ:
Empire State Building shooting leads to social media payday for one Instagrammer — As the world tries to figure out the motives of the Empire State Building shooter, one random Instagram photo provides a window into the dirty underbelly of photo licensing for wire services.
Discussion:
JIMROMENESKO.COM, New York Magazine, BAGnewsNotes, Mashable!, @romenesko and PandoDaily
Richard MacManus / ReadWriteWeb:
Why Topic Pages Haven't Worked For News Websites Yet — Yesterday we outlined why topic pages are becoming increasingly popular on the Web, as a way to organize social or news content. As daily consumers of such content, we're used to the chronological (and often real-time) ordering of updates from Facebook, Twitter, blogs and more.
Discussion:
CJR and New York Times
Elinor Mills / CNET:
Court affirms $675,000 penalty in music-downloading case — Joel Tenenbaum, penalized $675,000 for illegally downloading 31 songs online, looks on as court upholds the size of the damages fee. The fee had been lowered once; then reinstated. — A federal court in Massachusetts today upheld …
Discussion:
Techdirt, Gizmodo, Digital Spy, Softpedia News and BBC
Staci D. Kramer / paidContent:
In internet time, two months = nearly eight years — Nearly eight years ago, I took a two-month gig at paidContent to help Rafat out while I learned some valuable new skills. Many of you were incredibly patient and encouraging as I grappled with hand coding newsletters and maintaining …
Discussion:
The Wrap
Guardian:
Prince Harry pictures: Sun was right to publish, says Elisabeth Murdoch — Daughter of Rupert Murdoch says it would be sad if newspapers could not publish something so freely available on the internet — Rupert Murdoch's daughter has defended the Sun's right to publish pictures of Prince Harry naked …
Discussion:
Guardian, Guardian, Washington Post and Guardian
RELATED:
Bobbie Johnson / paidContent:
Prince Harry's brush with radical transparency: you can't stop the web
Prince Harry's brush with radical transparency: you can't stop the web
Discussion:
visitlasvegas.com, The Sun, dailyrecord, The New Yorker Blog, Business Insider and The Daily Beast
Craig Silverman / Poynter:
Australian politician wants media fined or suspended for ‘publishing blatant untruths’ — Much like the Leveson Inquiry in Britain, Australia recently held its own independent review of that country's news media. — Led by former Federal Court justice Ray Finkelstein …
Jim Romenesko:
Why Willamette Week bought Independent Weekly — Willamette Week announced on Thursday that it was buying Durham, N.C.-based Independent Weekly. The Portland alt's story on the deal pointed out that “the purchase comes at a time when newspapers -including alternative weeklies …
Jeff John Roberts / paidContent:
Wall Street Journal offers free Wi-Fi in NYC and San Francisco — Newspapers have been trying all sorts of gimmicks, from paywall promos to “open houses,” to get readers to discover their websites. The latest by the Wall Street Journal is clever: thousands of free Wi-Fi hotspots throughout New York City and San Francisco.
Discussion:
Engadget, Betabeat, FishbowlNY, NetNewsCheck Latest and MediaShift
John Hudson / The Atlantic Wire:
Jihadist Websites Target Navy SEAL Author — It only took one day for Fox News to identify the ex-Navy SEAL responsible for a new book on the death of Osama bin Laden. It took even less time for Al Qaeda-affiliated websites to begin distributing his name and image while calling for his “destruction.”
Discussion:
Open Channel and Mediaite