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10:35 AM ET, September 24, 2012

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Jeff John Roberts / paidContent:
Village Voice spins off Backpage.com  —  New York's iconic Village Voice and a dozen other weekly newspapers are parting ways with Backpage, a controversial classified site tied to alleged sex trafficking.  The split will result in the creation of a new ownership group that is focused solely on news and events.
Mallory Russell / AdAge:
Village Voice Management Buyout Leaves Backpage.com Behind  —  The Move Rids Management of a Headache, Takes Away Leverage for Critics  —  A group of Village Voice Media's senior managers has agreed to buy from its current ownership the print publications and digital properties — with the notable exclusion of Backpage.com.
Discussion: FishbowlNY and voicemediagroup.com
David Carr / New York Times:
Covering the World of Business, Digital Only  —  Business titans are generally not prone to self-appraisal, and when they do take stock, it usually begins and ends with a list of their conquests.  —  David G. Bradley, the owner of Atlantic Media, has never been like that.
Discussion: NetNewsCheck Latest
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Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Quartz Shoots for Tablet and Mobile Readers, but Doesn't Arm Itself With an App  —  After a summer of buzz, Quartz, Atlantic Media's new business news site, lights up today.  —  Pro Tip 1: If you want to see what the fuss is about, head over to qz.com, not quartz.com*.
Roy Greenslade / Guardian:
A broadband levy to fund journalism?  Now that's a very clever idea  —  Has David Leigh cracked it?  We have been puzzling for years about how to subsidise journalism once it makes the final transition from print to net (see here and here and here).  One obvious model is the funding of the BBC through its licence fee.
Discussion: AndyDickinson.net
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Robert Andrews / paidContent:
Guardian's chief investigator wants ISP tax to fund journalism
Paul Carr / PandoDaily:
Taxing Broadband to Save Journalism is One Big, Stupid Idea. We Need a Thousand Small, Smart Ones
Discussion: Charlie Beckett and Forbes
Craig Silverman / Poynter:
Exit interview: Brisbane says New York Times Public Editor job is ‘not a conversation’  —  Arthur Brisbane's New York Times email address has been shut off, and he sounds pretty happy about it.  —  “I'm trying to decompress,” he told me two days after his stint as the fourth public editor of The New York Times came to an end.
Rachel McAthy / Journalism.co.uk:
Homicide Watch DC wins Online Journalism Award for public service  —  Crime reporting site Homicide Watch DC, which recently crowdfunded more than $40,000 to secure its survival through the creation of a student reporting lab, was named as one of the winners of the Online Journalism Awards at the weekend.
RELATED:
Sherrina V. Navani / The Trentonian:
The Trentonian unveils Homicide Watch
Discussion: Digital First Media
Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
Andrew Mitchell ‘pleb’ row: police to investigate Sun leak  —  Scotland Yard has launched an investigation into how the Sun was leaked the internal report suggesting Conservative chief whip Andrew Mitchell did call the police “plebs” during an incident at Downing Street.
Erik Maza / WWD:
Tim Tebow Featured in Vogue, GQ  —  TEBOW'S CHOICE: Tim Tebow loves his fashion magazines.  But fashion magazines that might actually know a thing or two about football and employ knowledgeable sports writers?  Apparently, not so much.  —  Just ask Vogue and GQ.
Charles Arthur / Guardian:
The Kernel faces legal action by two more former contributors  —  Two more former contributors intend to sue the Kernel, the London-based startup blog, claiming it owes them thousands of pounds.  This follows moves by two other former Kernel contributors who are seeking to take parent company Sentinel Media …
Reuters:
Iran readies domestic Internet system, blocks Google  —  (Reuters) - Iran plans to switch its citizens onto a domestic Internet network in what officials say is a bid to improve cyber security but which many Iranians fear is the latest way to control their access to the web.
 
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 More News: 
Robert Weintraub / CJR:
The future of NFL Films looks bleak
Rachel McAthy / Journalism.co.uk:
How ProPublica is using Facebook group for patient safety investigation
Mona Zhang / FishbowlNY:
Patch Launches A More Social, More Mobile Site
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The newsonomics of all-access delight
 Earlier Picks: 
Amy Chozick / New York Times:
Philippe Dauman, the Man Who Would Be Redstone
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:
State Dept. Blasts CNN For Using Dead Ambassador's Journal
Doug Drinkwater / TabTimes:
The Financial Times marches to a different app drummer; embraces HTML5, Android, Windows 8