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8:50 AM ET, February 4, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
The Verge Hires Writer Who Quit CNET in Protest  —  Greg Sandoval, the CNET senior writer who resigned in protest when the site's parent company, CBS, interfered with its editorial coverage last month, has been hired by The Verge, the Web site that first revealed the full extent of CBS's involvement.
RELATED:
Greg Sandoval:
My new home  —  I'm saved.  Two weeks ago, I resigned from CNET after seven years at the technology news site.  Today, I can report that I have accepted an offer from The Verge to become a senior reporter.  I start in a couple of weeks.  Greg Sandoval When I say “saved,” …
Discussion: @sandonet and Talking Biz News
Jay Rosen / Pressthink:
Look, you're right, okay?  But you're also wrong.  —  A post that arises from a certain image I have of disaffected newsroom “traditionalists,” who look upon changes in journalism since the rise of the web with fear and loathing.  It is not addressed to particular people but to a climate …
Discussion: @palafo and @mattderienzo
Ian Burrell / The Independent:
London gets first dedicated digital terrestrial TV channel as ESTV launches London Live  —  London is to have its first dedicated digital terrestrial television channel, offering a service to 4 million homes, the broadcasting watchdog Ofcom announced today.  —  The new London Live channel …
RELATED:
Kristen Schweizer / Bloomberg:
Billionaire Lebedev Wins License to Start New London TV Station  —  Russian billionaire Alexander Lebedev and his son, Evgeny, won the right to operate a new London TV station that will rely on content from the family's London Evening Standard and Independent newspapers.
Mike Isaac / AllThingsD:
Twitter Got Hacked.  Expect More Companies to Follow.  —  The last week of tech headlines reads like some sort of cybersecurity end of days scenario.  The New York Times hacked.  The Wall Street Journal hacked.  The Washington Post hacked.  —  And finally on Friday, Twitter …
RELATED:
Washington Post:
Chinese hackers suspected in attack on The Post's computers
Margaret Sullivan / New York Times:
Decades of Leadership, Making an Exit  —  IT is considered a given, among many in management, that every employee is replaceable.  When even the most valuable staff member walks out the door, someone else takes over and does the job.  Life goes on and change is good.  —  I'm not so sure.
Hamish McKenzie / PandoDaily:
Andrew Sullivan and the new wisdom of the leaky meter  —  On the surface, Andrew Sullivan's bold move to sell subscriptions to a new, independent version of his blog, The Dish, seems to have paid off.  In the four weeks since putting out a call for subscriptions to the site at a cost of $19.99 a year …
RELATED:
Jeff Blagdon / The Verge:
Andrew Sullivan's grand experiment in reader-supported online journalism is now live
Discussion: The Dish and New York Magazine
Herbert J. Gans / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Journalism for democracy  —  Editor's note: Herbert Gans is one of America's preeminent sociologists, and some of his most notable work has come in examining the American news industry.  His seminal 1979 book Deciding What's News: A Study of CBS Evening News, NBC Nightly News …
Frédéric Filloux / Monday Note:
The Google Fund for the French Press  —  At the last minute, ending three months of tense negotiations, Google and the French Press hammered a deal.  More than yet another form of subsidy, this could mark the beginning of a genuine cooperation.  —  Thursday night, at 11:00pm Paris time …
Discussion: Guardian, Media News and TechCrunch
Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
News International to close phone-hacking compensation scheme  —  Former NoW publisher says applications for damages will not be considered after 8 April, as it seeks to move on from scandal  —  News International is closing down the compensation scheme it set up for News …
Charlie Warzel / Adweek:
Ars Technica Ads Get Ahead of the Story  —  In an analytics-obsessed Web climate, everyone is chasing the big story.  The problem is, more often than not, big breakout traffic scoops yield attention, eyeballs and notoriety, but very few dollars.  Last month, Deadspin broke the story …
Josh Constine / TechCrunch:
Facebook Ramps Up News Discovery Battle Against Apps Like Flipboard With “Articles Related To”  —  Rather than trust your friends and favorite Pages to post interesting stuff, Facebook is taking news discovery into its own hands with “Articles Related To...”.
 
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 More News: 
Faris Couri / BBC:
BBC Arabic and the complexities of the Arab world
Danny Shea / The Huffington Post:
Jon Klein: I Don't Regret Piers Morgan Hire, Keith Olbermann Could Have Helped CNN (VIDEO)
Discussion: TVNewser and Mediaite
David Gelernter / Wired:
The End of the Web, Search, and Computer as We Know It
 Earlier Picks: 
PandoDaily:
Sources: Ziff Davis is close to buying IGN
Discussion: AllThingsD
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The newsonomics of Aaron Kushner's virtuous circles
David Lieberman / Deadline.com:
YOU On Demand Offers Films On VOD In China Weeks After They Debut In Theaters
Jill Goldsmith / Variety:
News Corp. names two more execs to publishing biz
Discussion: mnilive.com, Reuters and Yahoo! Movies
 

 
From Techmeme:

Dwarkesh Patel / Dwarkesh Podcast:
Q&A with Mark Zuckerberg on Llama 3, buying H100 GPUs for Reels, AGI, energy constraints, dangers of open source, the metaverse, Meta's custom silicon, and more

Ryan Morrison / Tom's Guide:
Microsoft researchers introduce VASA-1, an AI model that creates a realistic talking face video from a portrait photo and an audio file, in research preview

Raffaele Huang / Wall Street Journal:
Apple removes WhatsApp and Threads from its App Store in China, saying it was ordered to do so by China's cyberspace officials citing national security concerns

 
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