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9:35 AM ET, October 15, 2012

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Michael Moynihan / The Daily Beast:
Nicholas Lemann: Journalism Is Doing Just Fine  —  When Nicholas Lemann announced that he was leaving his post as dean of Columbia Journalism School after 10 years on the job, many of his journalistic colleagues wanted to know the reason—the real reason—for his departure.
Alexandra Topping / Guardian:
Murdoch: hacking campaigners are ‘scumbags’  —  News Corp chief causes outrage on Twitter with caustic dismissal of victims who lobbied David Cameron last week  —  Rupert Murdoch has labelled victims of phone hacking “scumbag celebrities” after they met David Cameron during the Conservative party conference.
Alexis C. Madrigal / The Atlantic Online:
Dark Social: We Have the Whole History of the Web Wrong  —  Here's a pocket history of the web, according to many people.  In the early days, the web was just pages of information linked to each other.  Then along came web crawlers that helped you find what you wanted among all that information.
Discussion: TechCrunch and @buzzfeedben
Martin Beckford / Telegraph:
Jimmy Savile: Former BBC Trust chairman criticises ‘hysteria’  —  The BBC has been the victim of “hysteria” over the Jimmy Savile scandal, according to a former head of its governing body, as the number of girls abused by the disgraced presenter approached 100.
RELATED:
Amelia Hill / Guardian:   Savile questioned by BBC boss 20 years ago
Natasha Singer / New York Times:
Do-Not-Track Movement Is Drawing Advertisers' Fire  —  THE campaign to defang the “Do Not Track” movement began late last month.  —  Do Not Track mechanisms are features on browsers — like Mozilla's Firefox — that give consumers the option of sending out digital signals asking companies …
Om Malik / GigaOM:
Amplification & the changing role of media  —  For the past few days, I have been thinking about the evolution of what media is and its expanded role in the information ecosystem.  What got me thinking was Twitter co-founder and Square CEO Jack Dorsey's decision to blog his side of the story about his reduced role at Twitter.
T.C. Sottek / The Verge:
Reddit leaders deflect censorship criticism and defend hands-off policies  —  In wake of the Gawker ban controversy, Reddit's powerful moderators test commitment to free speech  —  Reddit's prides itself on its decentralized meritocracy —"subreddits are a free market.
Discussion: Guardian, Betabeat, Gawker and Boing Boing
RELATED:
John Herrman / @jwherrman:
Reddit's top admin tells me Gawker article ban “was a mistake on our part” http://www.buzzfeed.com/katienotopoulos / leaked-chat-logs-between-reddit- moderators-and-sta ...
Discussion: BuzzFeed
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Gannett announces rise in circulation revenue, driven by paywalls  —  Net operating revenues from print circulation were up 5.6 percent in the third quarter of 2012 over the same period the year before, Gannett announced Monday morning.  Seventy-one of Gannett's newspapers now have a paywall.
Associated Press:
AP names first international social media and UGC editor  —  The Associated Press has expanded its commitment to social media and user-generated content as global newsgathering resources, promoting Fergus Bell to the newly created position of social media and UGC editor — international.
Ryan Kohls / Poynter:
Swedish journalists explain arrest, imprisonment in Ethiopia  —  For 438 days, two Swedish freelance journalists were locked up in Ethiopian prisons for illegally entering the country and committing acts of terrorism.  Prior to their arrest, journalists had been working in the northern part of the country …
Sarah Lacy / PandoDaily:
Suddenly everyone wants New Yorker style content.  Only one catch: Who is going to write it?  —  One of our most popular stories all week has been David Holmes's report about how Tumblr wants to pay for journalism.  And not just cat pictures, re-written press releases, or 300 word snark-fests by junior reporters paid $12 a post.
Mara Shalhoup / Chicago Reader:
Thanks to smartphones, we're now in the golden age of reading  —  If you tune it at all to the near-constant chatter about the precarious state of quality journalism, you've probably heard that the digital revolution is largely to blame for quality journalism's decline—that publishers beholden …
David Carr / New York Times:
TV Debates That Sell More Than Just Drama  —  In 1960, John F. Kennedy was trailing Richard Nixon as they stepped into the crucible of the first nationally televised debate.  While Kennedy soared, Nixon stumbled and never recovered.  —  Network television played a definitive role, but those were very different times.
Discussion: Poynter and Media Decoder
 
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 More News: 
Nick Bilton / NYT Bits:
One on One: Robin Sloan, Author and ‘Media Inventor’
Discussion: TeleRead
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The newsonomics of near-term numerology
Chris Davies / SlashGear:
Amazon to Kindle customers: There's an antitrust refund incoming
Discussion: Ars Technica, Reuters and CNET
Anthony Ha / TechCrunch:
Founder Richard MacManus Departs ReadWriteWeb To Work On A Book
 Earlier Picks: 
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Lessons in how to crowdsource journalism from ProPublica
Thanks:@mterenzio
Josh Sternberg / Digiday:
Quartz Scores with Designers
BBC:
UK to review social media laws
Peter Brown / Guardian:
Guardian CEO outlines digital future of news and media industry