Top News:


White House Pushes for Media Shield Law — WASHINGTON — Under fire over the Justice Department's use of a broad subpoena to obtain calling records of Associated Press reporters in connection with a leak investigation, the Obama administration sought on Wednesday to revive legislation …
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Senate Dem revives media shield law — WASHINGTON — A top Senate Democrat plans to revive legislation that would protect journalists and their employers from revealing their sources, days after it was revealed that the Justice Department secretly obtained Associated Press phone records.
Discussion:
The Atlantic Wire and Associated Press


Holder Isn't Sure How Often Reporters' Records Are Seized … As his Justice Department faces bipartisan outrage for searching phone records of Associated Press reporters and editors, Attorney Gen. Eric Holder says he is not sure how many times such information has been seized by government investigators …
Discussion:
New York Times, emptywheel, The Huffington Post, The Latest Word, Mediashift, The Daily Caller, Post Politics and Foreign Policy
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AP subpoena: Journo says he lost sources in 2001 case — In denouncing the secret subpoena of its phone records by the Justice Department, the Associated Press talked, in part, about its journalistic lifeblood: “These records potentially reveal communications with confidential sources across …
Discussion:
Columbia Journalism Review, Broadcasting & Cable and Poynter

Leak Investigations Are an Assault on the Press, and on Democracy, Too
Discussion:
The Plum Line, Capital New York, Mother Jones, Politico, Guardian, E Pluribus Unum and New York Magazine

Damage to press freedom likely outweighs national security gain
Discussion:
Reuters, CNN, The Huffington Post, FOX News Radio, Newsday and TheBlaze.com

In AP surveillance case, the real scandal is what's legal
Discussion:
law.cornell.edu, Poynter, Media Matters Action Network, rcfp.org, emptywheel, Free Press Blog and @ggreenwald


The New Yorker Launches Strongbox, an Open-Source Anonymous Tip Tool Built by Aaron Swartz — Technology gives journalists unprecedented power to track down information. And technology gives lots of other people the ability to follow journalists' footprints. Just ask the Associated Press.
Discussion:
The New Yorker Blog, New Yorker, Poynter, Forbes, The New Yorker Blog, ZDNet, Folio, paidContent, The Verge, Foreign Policy, Boing Boing, Engadget and Kirk LaPointe's …


Newsweek.com Redesign Aims to Be ‘Snow Fall’ on a Weekly Basis — Metered Pay Wall Planned for New Browser-Based Experience — A team comprised of Newsweek staffers and employees of the design firm Huge were two months into the redesign of Newsweek.com — which will roll out today in beta …
Discussion:
Capital New York, FishbowlNY and Nieman Journalism Lab


Google demands Microsoft remove YouTube Windows Phone app, cites lack of ads — Microsoft updated its own YouTube application for Windows Phone just over a week ago and Google isn't impressed. The Verge has obtained a copy of a cease and desist letter that Google has sent to Microsoft recently …
Discussion:
VentureBeat, Businessweek, TechCrunch, CNET, AppleInsider, Digital Spy, Wired, ZDNet, Windows Phone, GeekWire, YouTube News, AndroidHeadlines.com, AllThingsD, Engadget, Pocket-lint, 9to5Google, BGR and ReadWrite

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:
AllThingsD, Tech Trader Daily, Consumerist, Hillicon Valley, VentureBeat, Business Insider, NPR, TUAW and Kindle Review
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Apple tells U.S. of tough talks, not collusion, with publishers
Discussion:
AllThingsD, paidContent, Bloomberg, Washington Post, BGR, iLounge, 9to5Mac, AppleInsider, CNET and App Advice


News Corp. hires Toni Cook Bush to oversee lobbying after split — News Corp. has hired D.C. insider Toni Cook Bush. (Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP) — News Corp. has hired a D.C. heavyweight to handle its lobbying efforts on Capitol Hill after it becomes primarily a newspaper publishing company.
Discussion:
Business Wire


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


With Thirst's Droplet, the vision for news on Google Glass becomes a little clearer — One of the big questions about Google Glass is how it will affect the way we consume information (if, that is, it gains popularity and acceptance in mainstream culture). In particular, many people …
Discussion:
Mashable, VentureBeat and AppNewser


At Least Two Pay-TV Operators Circling Hulu — At least two pay TV operators, including cable giant Time Warner Cable Inc., are weighing an investment in Hulu as the online video site considers a range of strategic options, according to people familiar with the matter.


Don't Look Now But AOL Sold Off Its Industry News Sites — Ever since they joined forces two years ago, Tim Armstrong and Arianna Huffington have been under the microscope, their every move dissected and critiqued. So it's impressive, in a way, that they were able to unwind one of their misadventures without attracting any notice.