Top News:
Sarah Marshall / Journalism.co.uk:
DMS13: 32% of WSJ traffic coming from mobile — Raju Narisetti from the Wall Street Journal explains why mobile first presents a ‘profound challenge’ for publishers, and lessons learnt from The Daily and AllThingsD — Almost one third of the Wall Street Journal's online readers access …
Discussion:
Journalism.co.uk
RELATED:
Jasper Jackson / TheMediaBriefing:
Digital Media Strategies: WSJ digital managing editor Raju Narisetti on the intersection between tech and content — What should newspaper publishing in the digital age look like ? It's the intersection of technology and content - with developers embedded in the newsroom and a platform-neutral subscription strategy.
Mark Suster / Both Sides of the Table:
The Most Interesting Online Video Trend — This article originally appeared on TechCrunch. — By now many of you know the Harlem Shake but what you may not appreciate is the broader trend behind the video and it has mirrored my general views on how TV will work in the future
Discussion:
The Verge, @infoarbitrage, @royrubin05, Forbes, BuzzFeed and TechCrunch
Margaret Sullivan / The Public Editor's Journal:
Problems With Precision and Judgment, but Not Integrity, in Tesla Test — As promised, I've spent the past several days looking into the reporter John M. Broder's test drive of the celebrated electric car known as the Tesla Model S. The article, which focused on two new “superchargers” …
Discussion:
Forbes, SlashGear, Engadget, Rehak/Stuebing Mostly Media, @sulliview, @dirkliedtke, @moorehn and @jeffjarvis
Katherine Rushton / Telegraph:
Google looks to cut funds to illegal sites — Google is in discussions with payment companies including Visa, Mastercard and PayPal to put illegal download websites out of existence by cutting off their funding. — If Google goes ahead with the radical move, it would not mark …
Discussion:
BBC, Search Engine Land, TweakTown News, CMU, SEO Book.com, Macleans.ca, WebProNews and Music Week
Hollywood Reporter:
British Prime Minister Dismissive of BBC Strike — David Cameron said there were no grounds for Monday's strike by BBC journalists because the corporation remains well-funded after a license feel deal in 2010. — LONDON - David Cameron the British prime minister, who contrasted …
Discussion:
Guardian, Mirror.co.uk, Guardian and Telegraph
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Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
As BBC strikes, Brits trust journalists less than Americans do
As BBC strikes, Brits trust journalists less than Americans do
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Guardian and The Independent
C. Custer / Tech in Asia:
A Shocking Expose of China's Black PR Industry Implicates Government Officials, is Quickly Deleted from the Web — Almost everyone knows about the public relations industry, but fewer people know about what in China is referred to as Black PR, the underground internet industry that has evolved with the spread of web 2.0 through China.
Discussion:
@herecomesnow, @mcfeelyp and The Next Web
Columbia Journalism Review:
Where the jobs are — How WYNC's data journalism efforts show new opportunities for journalists — There are probably few things that intimidate journalists like reams of data. Unemployment might be high on that intimidation list, but you could argue that that's a numbers issue, too.
Andy Plesser / Beet.TV:
Vivian Schiller: NBC News is Readying “Rich Journalism Destination” — NBC News is in the midst of the “reinvention” of its Web site which will launch this spring as a “rich journalism destination,” with enterprise, investigative reporting and a significant increase of “Web native video” …
Discussion:
NetNewsCheck Latest, Thanks:@beet_tv
David Carr / New York Times:
Logging Off to Trace a Web Photo to Its Source — When photographs of spontaneous events miraculously appear on the Web, it generally prompts two responses: wonder and skepticism. — So it was with an image of exploding manhole covers in Omaha that took over the Web last month.
Discussion:
The Buttry Diary, Media Decoder and Capital New York
Andy Plesser / Beet.TV:
The New York Times Launches Real-Time Ad Serving with Twitter Data — The New York Times has launched “Spark,” a product created by the Times' R&D lab that serves display advertising into stories as they are trending on Twitter, matched with the demographics of the users who “touch” …
Discussion:
Journalism.co.uk
Daniel Eran Dilger / AppleInsider:
Google asks journalists to tone down story of “massive” Google Play security flaw — After reporting that Google Play now distributes Android app buyers' location and contact information to developers, a journalist was contacted by the search giant with a request to tone down the story, its headline and its SEO information.
Discussion:
SEO Book.com and App Advice