Top News:
New York Times:
Holder Defends Justice Department in Journalists' Records Seizure — WASHINGTON — Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. on Tuesday defended the Justice Department's sweeping seizure of telephone records of Associated Press journalists, describing the article by The A.P. that prompted …
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NPR, FishbowlNY, TVWeek.com, msnbc.com, The Huffington Post, The Volokh Conspiracy, Politico, New York Magazine, Media Nation, Daily Mail and TVNewser
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Washington Post:
Damage to press freedom likely outweighs national security gain — WHEN THE Justice Department launched its investigation of alleged leaks of national security information by the Obama administration a year ago, we were skeptical. The history of such probes is mainly a tale of dead ends and unintended negative consequences.
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New York Times, Reuters, Newsday, The Huffington Post, FOX News Radio, TheBlaze.com and FishbowlNY
Timothy Lee / Washington Post:
In AP surveillance case, the real scandal is what's legal — On Monday the Associated Press reported that the Justice Department “secretly obtained two months of telephone records of reporters and editors for The Associated Press.” But here's what's really scary: The Justice Department's actions are likely perfectly legal.
Discussion:
law.cornell.edu, Poynter, Hit & Run, Media Matters Action Network, New Yorker, Mediashift, @ggreenwald and Slate
Margaret Sullivan / The Public Editor's Journal:
Leak Investigations Are an Assault on the Press, and on Democracy, Too — This was supposed to be the administration of unprecedented transparency. President Obama promised that when he took office, and the White House's Web site says so on this very day. It reads:
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Free Press and Free Press Blog
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The newsonomics of where NewsRight went wrong — Quietly, very quietly, NewsRight — once touted as the American newspaper industry's bid to protect its content and make more money from it — has closed its doors. — Yesterday, it conducted a concluding board meeting, aimed at tying up loose ends.
Discussion:
@niemanlab
Diane Bartz / Reuters:
Apple tells U.S. of tough talks, not collusion, with publishers — (Reuters) - Apple Inc responded to Justice Department accusations it conspired with publishers to push up electronic book prices, saying it negotiated with a number of publishing companies separately and crafted different agreements with each.
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Bloomberg, Washington Post, 9to5Mac, AppleInsider, App Advice and CNET
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New York Times:
U.S. Now Paints Apple as ‘Ringmaster’ in Its Lawsuit on E-Book Price-Fixing — WASHINGTON — The e-mail, from Steve Jobs of Apple to James Murdoch of News Corporation, reads as if one old sport were trying to cajole another into joining a caper: “Throw in with Apple and see if we can all …
Discussion:
TUAW, NPR and Kindle Review
Julie Bosman / New York Times:
E-Book Sales a Boon to Publishers in 2012 — E-book sales, especially in the thriving romance genre, gave the book business a lift in 2012, according to a survey of publishers released Wednesday. — In a year that was monopolized by the “Fifty Shades” erotic novels and their various knockoffs …
Discussion:
Nieman Journalism Lab and paidContent
David Carr / New York Times:
The Two-Way Street That Is Snooping and the News Media — Word on Monday that the Justice Department had obtained the records of more than 20 phone lines at The Associated Press sent the Fourth Estate into a frenzy. Big Government, Big Data, Big Brother, all the golems of an increasing surveillance-driven age were invoked.
Greg Sandoval / The Verge:
Exclusive: Google readies its Spotify competitor with Universal and Sony now on board — By signing the three largest record labels, it's likely we'll see Google roll out its new subscription music services at I /O — Odds are increasing that Google will give us a peek tomorrow during …
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Wall Street Journal, AllThingsD, CNET, WebProNews, Droid Life, SocialTimes, hypebot, Electronista, Media News, Softpedia News, Bloomberg, VatorNews, Android Authority, PhoneArena, Pocket-lint, Mashable, TechCrunch, 9to5Google, VentureBeat, App Advice, Reuters, AppleInsider, paidContent, Engadget, ReadWrite and Digital Media Wire
Tania Branigan / Guardian:
China tries to rein in microbloggers — Authorities show determination to control burgeoning culture of social media by closing accounts of writers and intellectuals — China has launched a new drive to tame its boisterous microblogging culture by closing influential accounts belonging …
Anthony Ha / TechCrunch:
PaidContent Founder Rafat Ali Raises Another $1.1M For Skift, His Site For Travel News And Data — Skift, the travel industry-focused site that was launched nine months ago by PaidContent founder Rafat Ali and Jason Clampet (who ran content and editorial partnerships at Frommers.com) …
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AllThingsD and The Next Web