Top News:
New York Times:
Times Reporter in China Is Forced to Leave Over Visa Issue — BEIJING — A correspondent for The New York Times was forced to leave mainland China on Monday after the authorities declined to issue him a visa for 2013 by year's end. — Chris Buckley, a 45-year-old Australian who has worked …
Discussion:
Committee to Protect …, Guardian, The Huffington Post and Daily Mail
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John Garnaut / Sydney Morning Herald:
China expels journalist after Wen revelations — AN AUSTRALIAN journalist with The New York Times has been expelled from China in an apparent act of retaliation for a news report about the family wealth of the Chinese Premier, Wen Jiabao. After 15 years in China, including 12 as a reporter …
Discussion:
Guardian and Business Insider
Mackenzie Weinger / Politico:
‘Journal News’ advertisers face boycott over gun map — The New York State Rifle & Pistol Association is calling for a nationwide boycott of the advertisers of the suburban New York newspaper that published online maps revealing names and addresses of people with pistol permits.
Discussion:
nysrpa.org, Gannett Blog and The Huffington Post
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Noreen O'Donnell / Reuters:
New York newspaper to list more gun permit holders after uproar
New York newspaper to list more gun permit holders after uproar
Discussion:
PandoDaily and Gawker
Reuters:
Tribune, out of Chapter 11, set to begin makeover as TV company — (Reuters) - Tribune Co, which started by publishing the Chicago Tribune on a hand press in 1847, sees a future in broadcasting, one not likely to include the major newspapers that made it a force in the news business.
Discussion:
NPR, Associated Press and Los Angeles Times
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Georg Szalai / Hollywood Reporter:
New Tribune Board to Include Peter Liguori, Other Entertainment Veterans — Ex-News Corp. and Yahoo exec Ross Levinsohn and former Disney exec Peter Murphy will also join the board as the media company emerges from bankruptcy. — Former top executives of Hollywood conglomerates …
Discussion:
Politico, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune and LA Observed
Associated Press:
Netflix CEO pay: Hastings' gets 100 percent raise — Netflix CEO pay will double after he took a 43 percent pay cut this past year for management missteps. Netflix CEO Reed Hastings will be paid $4 million in salary and stock options for the coming year. — LOS ANGELES
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Bill Maurer / Seeking Alpha:
Netflix Gives Reed Hastings Huge Raise: Why? — After the bell on Friday, Netflix (NFLX) announced that it was giving CEO Reed Hastings a huge raise. Mr. Hastings will get a $2 million salary along with $2 million of compensation through stock options, the ultimate value of which depends on how Netflix's shares perform.
Associated Press:
German magazine mistakenly publishes Bush obituary — BERLIN (AP) — Germany's respected news weekly Der Spiegel mistakenly published an obituary Sunday for former U.S. President George H.W. Bush, hours after a family spokesman said the 88-year-old was recovering from illness.
Discussion:
New York Magazine, Gawker and Mediaite
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Among Top News Stories, a War Is Missing — Look closely at the end-of-the-year lists of 2012's top news stories. What's missing? The 11-year-old war in Afghanistan and American-led counterterrorism efforts around the world. — The Pew Research Center's weekly polling on the public's interest …
Discussion:
Gawker
Salman Masood / New York Times:
Pakistan Lifts YouTube Ban, for 3 Minutes — ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — A ban on YouTube, which Pakistan imposed after an anti-Islam video caused riots in much of the Muslim world, was lifted Saturday, only to be reinstated — after three minutes — when it was discovered that blasphemous material was still available on the site.
Discussion:
The Express Tribune, BBC, CNET, TechCrunch, The Verge, AllThingsD, Electronista, CHINAdaily, Times of India, Examiner and The Lede
Rebecca Greenfield / The Atlantic Wire:
What the Future of China's New Internet Crackdown Looks Like — The Chinese government on Friday approved regulations that will require all of the country's Internet users to register their names, but it remains unclear when and how the ominous “real name” policy will go into effect — and what, exactly, will happen once it does.
Discussion:
PandoDaily
Owen Matthews / Spectator:
Who killed Newsweek? — Tina Brown can't just blame the internet — So farewell then, Newsweek magazine, which published its last print issue this week. After 79 years — 15 of them as my employer — the venerable old rag is to disappear into an uncertain, web-only future.
Discussion:
CyberJournalist.net and @ianbirrell
Anthony Ha / TechCrunch:
Touch Publishing Platform Onswipe Now Reaching 10M Monthly Active Users On iOS — Onswipe, a startup that helps publishers build websites optimized for iPads and other touchscreen devices, is closing out what sounds like a big year. Content published through the Onswipe platform reached …