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1:00 AM ET, May 31, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Charlie Savage / New York Times:
Holder May Rein In Prosecutors On Leaks  —  WASHINGTON — Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., under fire over investigative tactics in leak cases, has opened internal discussions over tightening rules on when prosecutors may seek phone logs and other information that could identify reporters' sources …
Discussion: New York Times
RELATED:
Dylan Byers / Politico:
Eric Holder to media: I get it  —  Attorney General Eric Holder expressed concern on Thursday about how the Department of Justice has handled recent media investigations at an off-the-record meeting with leading representatives of the press, according to those who were present.
Ron Fournier / NationalJournal.com:
7 Reasons Why the Media Shouldn't Keep Eric Holder's Secrets
RT:
US media execs rebuff Holder's closed-door wiretap scandal meeting
Edmund Lee / Bloomberg:
New York Times Is Said to Consider More Sponsored Stories  —  New York Times Co. (NYT), looking to imitate the business models used by startups such as BuzzFeed Inc., is considering letting advertisers sponsor more stories on its website, two people with knowledge of the situation said.
RELATED:
Richard Edelman / Edelman:
Show Me (a Little of) the Money
Jeff Jarvis / Medium:   In the End Was the Word and the Word Was the Sponsor's
Robert Channick / Chicago Tribune:
Chicago Sun-Times lays off its photo staff  —  The Chicago Sun-Times has laid off its entire photography staff, and plans to use freelance photographers going forward, the newspaper said.  About 20 full-times staffers received the news Thursday morning, according to sources familiar with the situation.
Alex Ben Block / Hollywood Reporter:
Hollywood YouTube Channels Hit With Hidden Cost  —  A 2010 law requiring closed captioning on all TV programming that airs online means an unexpected outlay of big bucks: Says producer Roger Corman, “We have no choice.”  —  A version of this story first appeared in the June 7 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine.
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Spin lets its editor-in-chief go  —  Spin has parted ways with Editor-in-Chief Caryn Ganz.  Jeff Leeds, the editorial boss of parent company SpinMedia, gave the news to staffers in a meeting Wednesday night in Spin's New York office.  —  Reached by phone, Ganz confirmed her departure …
Sarah Lyall / New York Times:
BBC Faces New Allegations of Sexual Abuse  —  LONDON — Since the case involving the television personality Jimmy Savile came to light in October, the British Broadcasting Corporation has received 152 new allegations of sexual abuse and harassment by 81 current and former employees, the broadcaster said Thursday.
Discussion: Telegraph
Janko Roettgers / paidContent:
Netflix wants to spend up to 15 percent of its content cash on originals  —  Netflix wants to triple its original content spend within the next few years, according to its Chief Content Officer, Ted Sarandos.  —  Netflix wants to spend up to 15 percent of its entire licensing budget …
Discussion: The Wrap
Mallary Jean Tenore / Poynter:
Social media editor role is ‘more about an evolution than a contraction’  —  Is the role of the social media editor really “dead”?  Rob Fishman thinks so.  In a widely circulated BuzzFeed piece published Wednesday, Fishman argues that newsrooms don't need social media editors like they used to.
Matt Brian / The Verge:
Wikipedia introduces ‘Nearby’ for mobile, suggests articles based on location  —  Wikipedia appears to have taken a leaf out of Foursquare's book with its new Nearby feature.  The new mobile page is designed to capture your location and deliver articles that help you learn more about your neighborhood …
Discussion: Wikimedia blog
Janko Roettgers / GigaOM:
Online video will be more popular than Facebook and Twitter by 2017  —  Online video isn't just growing fast, it's growing faster than any other type of consumer service offering - and soon it's going to be even more popular than Facebook, Twitter and Co, according to Cisco's new Visual Networking Index forecast.
Discussion: AdExchanger and Business Insider
Paul Bond / Hollywood Reporter:
Jeff Zucker on Cable News Rivals: ‘CNN Gets Held to a Higher Standard’  —  The new head of CNN also defends the network against the charge that anchors didn't correct a mistaken Boston Marathon report quickly enough.  —  Jeff Zucker inferred Wednesday that he might be willing to cede …
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Netflix boss: BBC is holding back UK children's shows  —  Ted Sarandos says corporation restricts UK licensing for up to five years, forcing streaming service to buy US shows instead  —  Ted Sarandos, Netflix's content chief, has accused the BBC of stifling the potential of homegrown children's shows …
RELATED:
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
BBC accused of acting like a ‘thug’ towards local papers
Discussion: Kirk LaPointe's …
 
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 More News: 
Lauren Indvik / Mashable:
‘New York Times’ Mobile Site Gets Much-Needed Upgrade
Alastair Reid / Journalism.co.uk:
How the Guardian built multimedia interactive Firestorm
 Earlier Picks: 
Eliza Kern / GigaOM:
Facebook and the very fine line between free speech and hate speech
Kelly E. Christensen / INMA:
Dallas Morning News encourages innovation by funding employee ideas
 

 
From Techmeme:

Lee-Anne Mulholland / The Keyword:
Google files its proposed remedies in the DOJ's search antitrust lawsuit, including letting browser companies have multiple default agreements across platforms

Joseph Menn / Washington Post:
A US judge finds NSO Group liable for exploiting a bug in WhatsApp to spy on 1,400 users and that WhatsApp is entitled to sanctions against NSO

Deepa Seetharaman / Wall Street Journal:
Sources: OpenAI's GPT-5, codenamed Orion, is behind schedule and faces technical hurdles, including high computing costs and limited high-quality training data

 
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