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11:00 AM ET, May 14, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Mark Sherman / Associated Press:
Gov't obtains wide AP phone records in probe  —  The Justice Department secretly obtained two months of telephone records of reporters and editors for The Associated Press in what the news cooperative's top executive called a “massive and unprecedented intrusion” into how news organizations gather the news.
RELATED:
Erin Madigan White / Associated Press:
AP responds to intrusive DOJ seizure of journalists' phone records  —  The U.S. Department of Justice notified The Associated Press on Friday, May 10, that it had secretly obtained telephone records for more than 20 separate telephone lines assigned to AP journalists and offices, including cell and home phone lines.
Jack Mirkinson / The Huffington Post:   Condemnation Of DOJ's AP Probe Continues; Carl Bernstein Calls It ‘Inexcusable’
Nitasha Tiku / Gawker:
Source: Bloomberg Was Supposed to Cut Off Spying Last Year, But Didn't  —  A high-ranking newsroom official for Bloomberg News was ordered last year to cut off reporters' access to information about how clients used the company's information terminals, according to a former Bloomberg reporter, but the spying continued anyway.
RELATED:
Heidi Moore / Guardian:
The Bloomberg ‘snooping scandal’ is completely overblown  —  Bloomberg was using pretty standard ‘big data’ on users to get a slight edge.  It's exactly what Wall Street tries to do  —  Bloomberg News has been accused of violating the privacy of its users by collecting their personal contact information …
Wall Street Journal:
FDIC and Bloomberg In Contact Over Data  —  The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and other government agencies have been in contact with Bloomberg LP in the wake of last week's disclosure that its journalists until recently had access to certain customer data, according to people familiar with the matter.
DealBook:
American Investor Targets Sony for a Breakup  —  Updated  —  An American hedge fund billionaire known for starting big fights has called for a breakup of the entertainment and electronic colossus Sony, according to people briefed on the matter, possibly setting off a battle that could roil Japan's famously staid corporate culture.
Jonathan Skillings / CNET:
Aereo gets set for Atlanta debut  —  The capital of Georgia will be the third city to get the TV streaming service, following New York and, from tomorrow, Boston.  —  Aereo is getting on a roll, with plans now to bring its streaming TV service to Atlanta.  —  The Atlanta launch is scheduled …
Wall Street Journal:
ESPN, Twitter Expand Tie-Up  —  Sports Network to Increase Highlights on Messaging Service, Generating Ad Sales  —  ESPN and Twitter Inc. are announcing a major expansion of their collaboration to post sports-related videos on the short-messaging service—part of a growing wave of tie-ups …
Lucia Moses / Adweek:
Atlantic Media to Launch Another Digital-First Brand, for Defense Community  —  Six months after launching digital business site Quartz, Atlantic Media is preparing to roll out its fifth brand and second “digital-first” property.  Defense One, a news and information site for the national security community …
Discussion: FishbowlNY and eMedia Vitals
Emil Protalinski / The Next Web:
Sandvine: Netflix owns one-third of North American traffic at peak, has doubled its mobile share in 12 months  —  Once again, broadband Internet service tracking firm Sandvine has released its latest report for North America, and once again, Netflix is ruling Internet usage.
Discussion: GigaOM, AllThingsD and Softpedia News
William Turvill / Press Gazette:
‘Colin was here’: Sky News Twitter account hacked  —  Sky News's breaking stories Twitter feed was hacked this morning.  —  One rogue tweet saying “Colin was here”, was left on the feed at 11.52am.  —  It was retweeted more than 7,000 times before being deleted.
Jim Edwards / Business Insider:
Advertisers Will Spend Nearly $10 Billion This Week On A Broken TV Model  —  This week, advertisers will sit down with the broadcast TV networks and hash out their “upfront” ad buying deals for the year.  —  The talks are one of advertising's huge, dramatic set-pieces.
 
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 More News: 
Maggie Brown / Guardian:
BBC top team blends experience and youth - but where are the women?
Guardian:
Channel 4 content boost results in £29m loss
Discussion: Media Week
Jenn Ettinger / Free Press:
New Free Press Report Shows How to Fix America's Broken Video Market
Wall Street Journal:
France Weighs New Tax to Fund Film, Music Industries
Michael Sebastian / AdAge:
Hearst's New Digital Chief on E-Commerce and the ‘Natural Evolution’ to Native Ads
Sebastian Anthony / ExtremeTech:
How the 2013 World Press Photo of the Year was faked with Photoshop
 Earlier Picks: 
Sean Ludwig / VentureBeat:
iHeartRadio hits 30M registered users, but it's a far cry from Pandora's 200M
Erica Ogg / GigaOM:
iTunes' recent growth shows content could be a big business for Apple
Discussion: Business Insider and SlashGear
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Reporter shot in New Orleans violence
Joel Smith / Pacific Standard:
The Alhambra Source and the Role of Sociology in Journalism
Discussion: LA Observed and FishbowlLA
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Sun paywall set at £2 with access to Premier League football highlights
 

 
From Techmeme:

Mark Gurman / Bloomberg:
Sources: Apple is working on a smart doorbell system with advanced facial recognition that can wirelessly connect and unlock third-party smart locks

Wall Street Journal:
Gina Raimondo says holding back China in the chips race is a “fool's errand”, and investment, more than export controls, will keep US ahead of Beijing

Andrew J. Hawkins / The Verge:
The US NHTSA suggests easing rules allowing for fully driverless cars and urges companies operating driverless cars to share more data for greater transparency

 
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