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5:35 PM ET, September 11, 2012

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 Top News: 
Poynter:
9/11 anniversary forgotten on the front page of today's New York Times  —  How do you mark the 11th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks?  For some papers in the cities where the attacks took place, the answer is subtle: It's time to move on.  At The New York Times and the New York Post, Sept. 11, 2012 is just another day.
RELATED:
Alex Weprin / TVNewser:
NBC's ‘Today’ Skips 9/11 Moment Of Silence For Kardashian Interview  —  At 8:46 AM, in New York City and at the White House in Washington DC, there was a moment of silence to remember when the first plane hit the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001.  In New York, the NYPD, FDNY …
Margaret Sullivan / The Public Editor's Journal:
How to Cover the 11th Anniversary of 9/11?  —  The pain, the outrage, the loss - these never fade.  The amount of journalism, however, must.  This is the 11th anniversary of Sept. 11, 2001 - that infamous date in the history of New York, the nation and the world.
Jeremy Peters / The Caucus:
A Journalist With Rare Access to Obama Had to Play by Quote Rule  —  Michael Lewis, the best-selling author of “Moneyball” and “The Big Short,” was granted extraordinary access to President Obama for his latest article in Vanity Fair.  —  But with that access came one major condition.
RELATED:
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:   Michael Lewis, Granted Unprecedented Access To Obama, Agrees To Quote Approval
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
Another exit at the ‘Observer’: News editor Megan McCarthy  —  Three New York Observer staffers announced their departures from the salmon-tinted weekly last week.  —  This week, there's another: news editor Megan McCarthy is out.  Her last day will be sometime this week.
Cynthia Cotts / The New York Observer:
New York Times Union Reps Back in Talks with Management Over Contract  —  Negotiations over the New York Times union contract started up again this week, and labor and management are already at loggerheads, with union members fuming over the “disrespect” they've been shown so far.
Discussion: The Huffington Post
RELATED:
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
The NYT doesn't need one public editor, it needs a hundred
Discussion: The Atlantic Online and @bydanielvictor, Thanks:@mathewi
Christine Haughney / Media Decoder:
For Paton, Bankruptcy for Journal Register Is ‘Embarrassing’ but Necessary  —  The last few days have provided a lesson in humility, John Paton acknowledged.  —  Mr. Paton, the chief executive of the management company Digital First Media Group, had his subsidiary, the Journal Register Company …
Tiffany Kary / Bloomberg:
Twitter Told to Produce Protestor's Posts or Face Fine  —  Twitter Inc. has to turn over information about an Occupy Wall Street protester's posts or face a fine, a judge ruled, giving the company three days to show it isn't in contempt of court.  —  New York State Supreme Court Judge Matthew …
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
Julian Assange threatened legal action over WikiLeaks documentary  —  Julian Assange threatened legal action against a film festival in an attempt to pressure them not to show a documentary on the history of WikiLeaks.  Assange, the WikiLeaks founder, threatened to sue the South by Southwest …
Douglas Brinkley / Vanity Fair:
Joe Scarborough to Test the Waters for a 2016 Presidential Run  —  By Douglas Brinkley Photograph by Mark Seliger  —  Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough, photographed at 30 Rockefeller Plaza, in New York City.  —  Five years ago this month, Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski began co …
Discussion: Mediaite, Politico and TVNewser
Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
Rupert Murdoch promotes NI top exec to News Corp chief technical role  —  Rupert Murdoch has chosen News International's top technology executive to set News Corporation's global strategy for digital publishing and to manage the technical end of the demerger of the media company into two separately listed businesses.
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
About 3,000 former Hearst interns join class action lawsuit  —  Diana Wang's lawsuit against Hearst has become a class-action lawsuit, and “may be decided as soon as early 2013,” Kayleen Schaefer reports.  Wang served as an unpaid intern for Harper's Bazaar, which Hearst owns.
Marco Arment / Instapaper Blog:
9to5  —  Last week, 9to5mac published this article in which the author intentionally derided me and Instapaper, called it “Instascraper”, and initially accused Instapaper of being responsible for the now-debunked “FBI” UDID leak.  Despite my attempts to get them to correct what they wrote, they refused.
 
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Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Apple is already fighting Amazon in the ebook price wars
Discussion: GalleyCat and Softpedia News
Greg Sandoval / CNET:
Appeals court sides with RIAA, Jammie Thomas owes $222,000
Discussion: Business Insider
Alex Weprin / TVNewser:
Fox News Contributors Have Conflicts, But No Disclosure
Press Association:
News Corp info prompts prison officer arrest
Discussion: @neilsonandrew
 Earlier Picks: 
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Journalism's Summer of Sin marked by plagiarism, fabrication, obfuscation
Danelle Morton / CJR:
Bruce R. Brugmann, one of the last of the alt-weekly lions, is calling it quits. Sort of.
Discussion: TechCrunch, CNET and Forbes
Rebecca Shapiro / The Huffington Post:
NBC Paralympics Coverage Criticized By IPC
Discussion: BBC
Leigh Munsil / Politico:
We're not spying on you, DOD assures journos
Robert Mankoff / The New Yorker Blog:
Nipplegate: Why the New Yorker Cartoon Department Is About to Be Banned from Facebook