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6:00 PM ET, October 28, 2012

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Julie Moos / Poynter:
New York Times suspends paywall for Hurricane Sandy  —  New York Times spokesperson Eileen Murphy confirmed by email that the news organization is suspending its paywall starting this afternoon, so that readers can get information about Hurricane Sandy.  —  “The gateway has been removed from the entire site and all apps.
RELATED:
Erik Wemple / Washington Post:
CNN bans ‘Frankenstorm’ term for Hurricane Sandy  —  Hurricane Sandy, a big storm expected to hit the Eastern Seaboard just shy of Halloween, has taken on the popular nickname of “Frankenstorm.”  A Newsday story takes the moniker to punning extremes, noting, “Meteorologists expect …
Margaret Sullivan / New York Times:
An Opinion to Consider Before You Vote  —  WHEN Jill Abramson, the executive editor, answered questions from readers this month on the Times Web site, she gave an unequivocal answer to a question about Times editorials.  —  “As executive editor, I have no involvement with editorials,” she said.
Discussion: Poynter, Pressing Issues and JSOnline
RELATED:
Jennifer Epstein / Politico:
New York Times endorses Obama ‘enthusiastically’  —  The New York Times editorial board, rather unsuprisingly, endorsed President Obama on Saturday.  But unlike many other papers calling for the president's re-election with some resignation, the Times is “enthusiastically” backing him.
Knowledge@Wharton:
WSJ's Raju Narisetti: ‘Journalism Has to Be Hand in Glove with Technology’  —  After a six-year hiatus from The Wall Street Journal, Raju Narisetti returned to the paper earlier this year to head its online news efforts.  From 1994 to 2006, Narisetti worked for the WSJ in the U.S. and abroad …
Ron Rosenbaum / Arts & Culture:
Lewis Lapham's Antidote to the Age of BuzzFeed  —  With his erudite Quarterly, the legendary Harper's editor aims for an antidote to digital-age ignorance  —  Lewis Lapham, the legendary former editor of Harper's, who, beginning in the 1970s, helped change the face of American nonfiction …
Rebecca J. Rosen / The Atlantic Online:
Surmounting the Insurmountable: Wikipedia Is Nearing Completion, in a Sense  —  And that's something of a challenge for the collaborative encyclopedia going forward  —  For about the last five years, Wikipedia has had trouble getting and keeping new volunteer editors.
Discussion: The Verge
John Jannarone / Wall Street Journal:
News Corp. Unit Interested in Penguin Group  —  HarperCollins' parent News Corp . has expressed interest in buying Penguin Group, potentially undercutting merger discussions between book publishers Penguin and Random House, said a person familiar with the situation.
Discussion: Media Decoder and NY Daily News
Sarah Marshall / Journalism.co.uk:
Al Jazeera creates interactive video transcripts of debates  —  Each word in the transcripts of the US presidential debates is linked to the exact point in the video where that word is spoken by Obama or Romney  —  The four US presidential debates maybe over but Al Jazeera English now offers …
Margaret Sullivan / The Public Editor's Journal:
‘Great Journalism’ That Has Unwanted Business Impact in China  —  Here's one memorable part of the coverage of the Chinese government's censorship Friday of The New York Times's Chinese-language Web site: the word “harmonized.”  —  The word crops up in a Washington Post story …
RELATED:
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
‘Times’ foreign editor says readers in China are finding their way to the site despite government blockade
Discussion: New York Times, Guardian and CNET
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
The ‘Times’ hits its first hurdle in its quest to capture the Chinese market
Discussion: CNET, The Week, FishbowlNY and DealBook
David Weigel / Slate:
The Power of James O'Keefe  —  This is a fact, and it will piss of liberals, but: James O'Keefe has had more of an impact on the 2012 election than any other journalist.  His newest victory occured in Virginia, where a reporter from his Project Veritas approached Patrick Moran …
New York Times:
Spain's Troubles Catch Up With a Storied Newspaper  —  MADRID — El País established itself as the leading newspaper in Spain in the late 1970s, serving as a frontline witness to the formative period when Spain returned to democracy after the death of the dictator Francisco Franco.
Justin Ellis / Nieman Journalism Lab:
BuzzFeed adapts its branded content approach to political advertising, and Obama's in  —  Add this to the signs that BuzzFeed is becoming a serious player in the media business: campaign ads.  —  More specifically, native, BuzzFeed-y, campaign ads.  This month Obama for America became …
Discussion: Wired and the Econsultancy blog
 
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 More News: 
Adrianne Jeffries / The Verge:
In 2012 election, the meme factory hones its assembly line
Discussion: GigaOM
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The newsonomics of Rupert Murdoch, American publisher
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
ValoBox launches pay-by-the-piece ebooks with O'Reilly and Guardian
 Earlier Picks: 
Ryan Chittum / CJR:
The paywall prevents a deeper downturn at the NYT
Discussion: BtoB Magazine and Poynter
Cory Bergman / Lost Remote:
Boxfish debuts innovative live TV guide on iPhone
Jennifer Van Grove / VentureBeat:
How the new Digg digs up its top stories — without your help, thank you very much
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Sony Reader launches virtual book club
 

 
From Techmeme:

Andy Greenberg / Wired:
Cisco details a hacking campaign that penetrated multiple governments' networks using two zero-day flaws in its VPN and firewall Adaptive Security Appliances

Cheng Ting-Fang / Nikkei Asia:
TSMC unveils a new chip manufacturing technology called A16, and says the company plans to start producing its ultra-advanced 1.6nm chips by 2026

Ben Glickman / Wall Street Journal:
The US awards Micron up to $6.1B under the CHIPS Act, to support an up to $125B investment to build a “megafab” in New York and Idaho over the next 20 years

 
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