Top News:
Politico:
Reuters' Matthew Keys indicted for conspiring with hacker group ‘Anonymous’ — Matthew Keys, a deputy social media editor at Thomson Reuters, has been charged in an indictment for allegedly conspiring with members of the hacker group “Anonymous” to hack into a Tribune Company website, the Justice Department announced today.
Discussion:
Betabeat, The Huffington Post, TechCrunch, @mikememoli, @samfbiddle, Salon, Bloomberg, Business Insider, Business Insider, Talking Points Memo, @revmagdalen, @acarvin, @evanchill, @jcstearns, Quartz, @emilybell, The Next Web, @fieldproducer, @blakehounshell, @jeffsonderman, BuzzFeed, @travisblock, @melanierenzulli, @kateaurthur, @shortformernie, @ryanchittum and Talking Biz News
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The United States Department of Justice:
Former Web Producer Indicted in California for Conspiring with “Anonymous” Members to Attack Internet News Site — A former web producer for a Tribune Company-owned television station in Sacramento, Calif., was charged today in an indictment for allegedly conspiring with members of the hacker group …
Discussion:
Poynter, Media Decoder, Forbes, GigaOM, Daily Dot, NetNewsCheck Latest, Guardian, Hillicon Valley and Business Insider
Ryan J. Reilly / @ryanjreilly:
Discussion:
The Verge, L.A. NOW, @ryanjreilly and Mashable!
Sam Biddle / Gizmodo:
Reuters Employee Exposed as Alleged Anonymous Agent (Updating)
Reuters Employee Exposed as Alleged Anonymous Agent (Updating)
Discussion:
VentureBeat
Om Malik / GigaOM:
Google Reader lived on borrowed time: creator Chris Wetherell reflects — You would think that Chris Wetherell, an early creator of Google Reader (and part of the team that eventually made it happen) would be feeling sorry for himself — after all Google had decided to euthanize a product he …
Discussion:
Marco.org, Building Feedly, Reuters, Fast Company, Techdirt, Slate, TechCrunch, NYT Bits, Forbes, ZDNet, Motherboard, VentureBeat, BBC, Dave Winer, GeekWire, The Dish, Softpedia News and Marketing Land
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Zachary M. Seward / Quartz:
Google Reader's demise is awful for Iranians, who use it to avoid censorship — Google's announcement that it's killing off Google Reader, the company's beloved, if not wildly popular, tool for consuming RSS feeds, was met with outrage from journalists and other, largely American nerds …
Discussion:
Wired, Forbes, The Atlantic Wire, The Verge, Fortune, TechCrunch and Business Insider
John Herrman / BuzzFeed:
Google Reader Still Drives Far More Traffic Than Google+
Google Reader Still Drives Far More Traffic Than Google+
Discussion:
Mashable!, ZDNet, The Daily Beast and Dave Winer
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Google Reader, please don't go — I need you to do my job
Google Reader, please don't go — I need you to do my job
Discussion:
VentureBeat, Slate, GigaOM, pressgazette.co.uk, The Next Web, BetaNews, The Verge, ReadWrite, Reuters, @carr2n, @editorialiste, @abbruns, @tcarmody, @tcarmody and One Man & His Blog
Digg Blog:
We're Building A Reader — Like many of you, we were dismayed to learn that Google will be shutting down its much-loved, if under-appreciated, Google Reader on July 1st. Through its many incarnations, Google Reader has remained a solid and reliable tool for those who want to ensure …
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The Official Google Blog, Lifehacker, Building Feedly, Inside Flipboard, Gartner, Fast Company, Marketing Land, AllThingsD, Nick Bradbury, Forbes, GalleyCat, TechCrunch, New York Magazine, Mashable!, Pocket-lint, CNET, Search Engine Land, The Awl, NetNewsCheck Latest, Adrants, SocialTimes, CNNMoney.com, ZDNet, PopWatch, WebProNews, CNN, Co.Design, The Week, Plagiarism Today, ABCNEWS, Daily Dot and Business Insider
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Emil Protalinski / The Next Web:
Digg announces plan to build an RSS reader with 'the best of Google Reader's features,' including its API
Digg announces plan to build an RSS reader with 'the best of Google Reader's features,' including its API
Discussion:
Betabeat, The Atlantic Wire, WebProNews and Mashable!
Brian Stelter / Media Decoder:
Chris Hayes to Take Over 8 P.M. Slot on MSNBC — Chris Hayes will take over the 8 p.m. time slot on MSNBC in the next month, the channel is expected to announce on Thursday morning, the day after the current host of that hour, Ed Schultz, said he was moving from the weekdays to the weekends.
Jim Romenesko:
Boston Phoenix is folding — Boston's alt-weekly, founded in 1966, is closing. I'm waiting for more information to post.
Wall Street Journal:
Facebook Working on Incorporating the Hashtag — Facebook Inc. is getting ready to take on a symbol of rival Twitter: the hashtag. — Facebook is working on incorporating the hashtag, one of Twitter Inc.'s most iconic markers, into its service, said people familiar with the matter.
Discussion:
AllThingsD, GigaOM, Fast Company, TechCrunch, CNET, Daily Dot, Business Insider, The Verge, Pocket-lint, Mashable! and The Next Web
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Biden's office forces reporter to delete photos, apologizes — A staffer for Vice President Joe Biden demanded that a reporter delete photos he'd taken at an event in Rockville, Md., Tuesday. The vice president's office later apologized to University of Maryland J-school Dean Lucy Dalglish …
Discussion:
Politico, TechCrunch, The Daily Caller, Reuters, @jayrosen_nyu, Mediaite and The Huffington Post
Sarah Perez / TechCrunch:
CBS Brings Ad-Sponsored Streaming TV To iPhone And iPad; Social Integration, Android & Windows 8 Support Still To Come — CBS is today introducing a new iOS application for iPad and iPhone, which brings its television programming to mobile devices, offering full episodes for streaming a week after they originally air.
Press Gazette:
Cameron urges Parliament to back Royal Charter: 'There is no point producing a system the press won't take part in' — David Cameron said that press owners would have refused to sign up to the system of press regulation backed by statute called for by Labour and the Lib Dems.
Discussion:
Guardian and Jon Slattery
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Andrew Woodcock / Press Association:
Leveson press reform proposal discussions break down
Leveson press reform proposal discussions break down
Discussion:
BBC, Telegraph, politics.co.uk, Channel 4, Spectator, Hollywood Reporter and Guardian
Christine Haughney / New York Times:
Spinoff of Time Inc. Rattles Employees — It was an elite reception at a glittery Manhattan setting: prominent media figures like Gayle King and Lesley Stahl gathered on the 10th floor of the Time Warner Center on Monday night to toast Sheryl Sandberg, the Facebook executive who recently released a book about her life.
Discussion:
Bloomberg, Motley Fool, Media Decoder, FishbowlNY and USA Today
Dylan Byers / Politico:
Sources: Olbermann's inability to get a job cited in Current TV settlement — Keith Olbermann has settled his $50 million lawsuit with Current TV, bringing an end to the almost year-long legal dispute over the outspoken host's dismissal from the liberal news network.
Discussion:
Forbes and Chickaboomer
David Corn / Mother Jones:
Meet Scott Prouty, the 47 Percent Video Source — For months, he and I shared a big secret and repeatedly discussed whether he should go public or stay hidden. — “Scott Prouty.” — The fellow on the other end of the phone call pronounced his name with hesitation.
Discussion:
The Daily Caller, ABCNEWS, New York Magazine, msnbc.com, Lynn Sweet, Business Insider, The Week and Pressing Issues
Joshua Benton / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Paul Salopek's slow-journalism walk around the world earns nonprofit status from the IRS — You may remember Paul Salopek from our story about him in December. Paul, a two-time Pulitzer winner and a longtime foreign correspondent, was here last year as a visiting Nieman Fellow …
Discussion:
dmlp.org
R. Scott Moxley / OC Weekly:
ABC News' ‘20/20’ Faces Libel Lawsuit for OC Internet-Dating Story — [Moxley Confidential] Orange County judge refuses network's demand to kill libel lawsuit against the ABC program — Twenty months ago, ABC News' 20/20 broadcast an hour-long episode on an important public topic: Internet-dating crooks.
Discussion:
LA Observed
Karen Fratti / 10,000 Words:
Can't We All Just Subscribe? Why ‘Paywalls’ Won't Get Us Anywhere — Circling in my head this week are two media bits that I probably wouldn't have paid attention to if I wasn't still mulling over the state of paid journalism. — The first was an email from Pro Publica …