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4:45 PM ET, December 7, 2012

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Hamilton Nolan / Gawker:
Online Paywalls and the Future of Media: A Few Hard Truths  —  Yesterday, both The Daily Beast (or, more accurately, whatever Tina Brown can toss together after they've absorbed the corpse of Newsweek and laid a bunch of people off) and the Washington Post announced that they may be instituting …
Discussion: JIMROMENESKO.COM and The Wrap
RELATED:
David Carr / Media Decoder:
Pay Wall Push: Why Newspapers Are Hopping Over the Picket Fence  —  When The Wall Street Journal broke the news that The Washington Post was likely to start charging for online content sometime next year, it should not have come as a surprise, but it did.  —  The shock had something …
Keach Hagey / Wall Street Journal:
Washington Post Considers a Paywall  —  The Washington Post, one of the last holdouts against the trend of charging readers for online access to newspaper articles, is likely to reverse that decision in 2013, according to people familiar with the matter.  —  While details are being finished …
Jeff Bercovici / Forbes:
Washington Post, Daily Beast Jumping On The Paywall Bandwagon. Too Late?
Discussion: Capital New York
Caity Weaver / Gawker:
DJs Behind the Royal Hospital Hoax Have Deleted Their Twitter Accounts; There's Speculation They've Been Fired (UPDATE)  —  The two DJs behind the Kate Middleton hospital prank, now being blamed as a contributing factor to her nurse's suicide, have either deleted their verified Twitter accounts, or had them removed.
RELATED:
Guardian:   2Day FM: Australia's shock-jock station with history of backfiring stunts
Dashiell Bennett / The Atlantic Wire:
How the Prank Call at Kate Middleton's Hospital Turned Deadly
Dan Sabbagh / Guardian:
News Corp's publishing arm to focus on losses at Times and Sunday Times  —  More integration of titles difficult under terms that Rupert Murdoch agreed for Times Newspapers in 1981  —  Slashing losses at the Times and Sunday Times, running at an estimated £1m a week …
RELATED:
Bloomberg:
News Corp.'s The Daily Shutdown Affects 126 Employees
Discussion: The Daily Beast
Telegraph:
Leveson Report: PM proposes third way to regulate the press  —  David Cameron is considering establishing a new independent press watchdog by Royal Charter - the mechanism used to set up the BBC and the Bank of England.  —  Watch Lord Leveson deliver his report
Discussion: BBC and Guardian
RELATED:
Rob Fishman / BuzzFeed:
Google's Lost Social Network  —  Last October, while hundreds of protesters were encamped in Zuccotti Park, a handful of people occupied a glass building in downtown Washington D.C. Wearing sheepish grins and business casual attire, the ninety-nine percent they were not; one demonstrator said he worked for Grover Norquist.
Erik Wemple / Washington Post:
Why didn't NBC News apologize to George Zimmerman?  —  There are lots of damning allegations against NBC News in the “reckless defamation” lawsuit filed yesterday by lawyers for George Zimmerman.  It charges NBC News with an effort to “create the myth that George Zimmerman was a racist and predatory villain” …
Discussion: The Daily Caller
RELATED:
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Guardian News & Media plans to shed 68 editorial posts  —  Publisher of the Guardian, Observer and MediaGuardian says it must save £7m from the editorial budget  —  Guardian News & Media, the publisher of the Guardian, Observer and guardian.co.uk, has informed staff of plans …
Discussion: The Huffington Post and Telegraph
Margaret Sullivan / The Public Editor's Journal:
Some Second Thoughts and Reader Feedback About the Middle East and Social Media  —  When I wrote last Wednesday about The Times's Jerusalem bureau chief, Jodi Rudoren, and criticism of her social media use, many readers - and some of those quoted in the blog post - responded.
David Kravets / Wired:
Hollywood's Total Piracy Awareness Program Set for January Launch  —  UNIVERSAL CITY, California - Beginning in a few weeks, the nation's major internet service providers will roll out an initiative — backed by Obama and pushed by Hollywood and the record labels - to disrupt …
Discussion: Plagiarism Today
Foster Kamer:
The Worst People in New York City, No. 92: Ryan Holiday  —  Okay, so, The New York Observer for some reason thought it'd be a good idea to put this Ryan Holiday assclown's pieces on their site.  Maybe Gell was like: Hey, let's troll everyone while we decide whether or not to keep the media desk …
Discussion: ZDNet
Mike Isaac / AllThingsD:
For Netflix and the SEC, a Facebook Share Should Be Public Enough  —  Most people worry about over-sharing on Facebook.  Under-sharing?  Not so much.  —  Except, that is, for the Securities and Exchange Commission, which is considering taking action against Netflix for a Facebook post made by Netflix CEO Reed Hastings.
Discussion: Business Week and GigaOM
RELATED:
Ryan Lawler / TechCrunch:
Netflix Being Investigated By The SEC For CEO Reed Hastings' Public Facebook Posts
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Vevo's YouTube Deal Expires in Three Days.  But the “Hulu for Music Videos” Site Won't Go Dark.  —  Vevo, the digital music video service, and Google, which powers Vevo.com and distributes Vevo's videos on its YouTube site, have a distribution deal that expires on Sunday.
Discussion: WebProNews
Reuters:
Analysis: Hollywood sees licensing cash cow in Disney-Netflix deal  —  (Reuters) - Cha-ching!  —  That's the sound ringing in the ears of Hollywood studio executives after Walt Disney Co landed a rich deal with Netflix to stream its movies to television.  —  Netflix's arrival as a bidder …
 
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 More News: 
Megan Garber / The Atlantic Online:
The Tweet-Like News Flash That Announced Pearl Harbor
Discussion: Poynter
Julie Moos / Poynter:
Cleveland Plain Dealer union gets new deal that protects staff from future layoffs, raises pay 8%
Discussion: Willamette Week
Jim Romenesko:
Photojournalism student killed in bicycle accident wrote his own obit in September
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
BBC Christmas strike averted after Asian Network job dispute is settled
Rip Empson / TechCrunch:
Amidst Ongoing Legal Battles, Aereo To Launch Apps For Smart TVs, Set-Top Boxes; Game Consoles Likely To Follow
Discussion: NetNewsCheck Latest
Chris Amico / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Opened Captions: Turning the spoken words on TV screens into streams of hackable data
 Earlier Picks: 
Azam Ahmed / New York Times:
Unlike Blasphemy in Video, a YouTube Ban Is Shrugged Off
Andrew Pugh / Press Gazette:
Met bans blogger from using Twitter over whistleblowing book
Keach Hagey / Wall Street Journal:
Martha Stewart to Shut Down ‘Whole Living’
Discussion: New York Post, Adweek and AdAge
Robert Channick / Chicago Tribune:
Tribune resumes limited usage of Journatic
Discussion: Poynter and Street Fight