Top News:
Washington Post:
U.S. charges Snowden with espionage — Federal prosecutors have filed a sealed criminal complaint against Edward Snowden, the former National Security Agency contractor who leaked a trove of documents about top-secret surveillance programs, and the United States has asked Hong Kong to detain …
Discussion:
Mediaite, VentureBeat, Gawker, TechCrunch, New York Times, CNN, CNET, The Atlantic Wire, msnbc.com, ZDNet, Reuters, USA Today, InformationWeek, Talking Points Memo, AllThingsD, RT, BuzzFeed, @arimelber, @kashhill, Mashable, @jcstearns, @feldmaniac, @charlie_savage, @emptywheel, @wikileaks, The Daily Beast, @jesselynradack, Quartz, @ggreenwald, The Next Web, @pewresearch, @sharylattkisson, The Week and Hit & Run
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Philip Bump / The Atlantic Wire:
Army: Freedom of Information Does Not Include Edward Snowden's Military File — A Freedom of Information Act request from The Atlantic Wire for the military records of Edward Snowden was “withheld in its entirety” by the Department of the Army. Despite the public value of better understanding …
Discussion:
BBC
Meenal Vamburkar / Mediaite:
The Guardian Responds To Sen. McCaskill's Charge Of Promoting ‘Agenda’ Through NSA Reporting — The NSA surveillance story has elicited strong reactions from those on both sides of the issue. Among them was Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO) who, on CNN yesterday, attacked the Guardian for having an …
Discussion:
The Huffington Post and Politico
Noreen Malone / New Republic:
Sources of Discomfort — National security reporting in the age of leak hunts — It doesn't take a top-secret data-mining algorithm to tell you that national security reporting has changed in the years since 9/11. A would-be whistle-blower is newly able to share vast amounts of classified information by simply tapping a mouse pad.
Discussion:
Poynter
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Edward Snowden isn't determining order of leaks, reporters say
Edward Snowden isn't determining order of leaks, reporters say
Discussion:
The Week, Mother Jones and VentureBeat
Christie Smythe / Bloomberg:
Gawker's Unpaid Interns Sue After Fox Searchlight Ruling — Gawker Media LLC was sued by unpaid interns who allege the online publisher violated minimum-wage law, 10 days after a federal judge ruled in a similar case that interns at Fox Searchlight Pictures Inc. should have been paid.
Discussion:
The Wrap, Hollywood Reporter and @internjustice
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Aaron Mesh / Willamette Week:
More Than 35 Newsroom Staff Laid Off at The Oregonian — Newsroom layoffs at The Oregonian have topped 35 reporters, editors and photographers today as the paper reduces home-delivery days and cuts staff. — Among the more prominent names WW has confirmed The Oregonian has laid off …
Discussion:
Poynter, @ryanchittum and GeekWire
RELATED:
Ryan Chittum / Columbia Journalism Review:
The ax falls at The Oregonian
The ax falls at The Oregonian
Discussion:
Oregon Business, bizjournals and Oregonian
Lucia Moses / Adweek:
Rolling Stone Publisher Fired: Matt Mastrangelo was there 3 years — Jann Wenner has dismissed the publisher of his flagship Rolling Stone, Matt Mastrangelo. Mastrangelo had been in the position for three years (12 years in all at Wenner Media), and first-quarter ad pages were up 17 percent year-over-year to 190.
Discussion:
The New York Observer, @lmoses and FishbowlNY
Harrison Weber / The Next Web:
AOL is launching a Google Reader replacement Monday: ‘All your favorite websites, in one place’ — As the end of Google Reader nears, AOL is planning to announce its own alternative to the service: “AOL Reader.” — As you can see on the current landing page for the service, which is public …
Discussion:
Pocket-lint, Betabeat, Engadget, 9to5Mac, The Verge, CNET, AllThingsD, WebProNews, Mashable and Gizmodo
Alexei Oreskovic / Reuters:
Yahoo's Mayer shines spotlight on video — Marissa Mayer, President and CEO of Yahoo, answers questions during the Reuters Global Technology Summit in the Thomson Reuters offices in San Francisco, California, June 20, 2013. REUTERS/Beck Diefenbach — As Marissa Mayer approaches …
Discussion:
Business Insider and @peterlauria3
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
Disappointing Fall for ‘Rock Center,’ a News Program With Big Ambitions — If “Rock Center With Brian Williams” has proved anything in the last year and a half, it is this: However hard it is to gather an audience for any kind of show in prime time, for news programming, the task is even harder.
Discussion:
TVNewser
Hamilton Nolan / Gawker:
Here Is the Archive of the Famous Liberal Media ‘Journolist’ — Way back in 2009, the hottest media story was the exposure of the existence of “Journolist,” a private listserv of several hundred mostly liberal journalists, talking to each other about crap. This was perceived as a big scandal!
Discussion:
The Wrap, @delrayser, @daveweigel, @j_strong, The Atlantic Wire, Mediaite, @pjtatler, @daveweigel, @daveweigel, @ledbetreuters, @hamiltonnolan, @moorehn and Softpedia News
Marianne Brown / Voice of America:
Vietnam Urged to Release Bloggers on Journalism Day — HANOI — While journalists working for Vietnam's state-run media are receiving gifts for Revolutionary Journalism Day, bloggers and Internet activists are not so lucky. The Vietnamese government seems eager to celebrate the role …
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:
High-Ranking Washington Post Editor Considering Government Job — NEW YORK — Douglas Frantz, the national security editor for the Washington Post, is considering taking a job with the State Department and is currently on leave from the paper, according to newsroom sources.
Discussion:
@johnrussell99
Wired:
Introducing Aaron's Law, a Desperately Needed Reform of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act — The Internet is up for grabs. — Foreign countries want to control it. Military regimes use it to spy, to oppress, and to attack public and private institutions. ‘Big Content’ sought to censor it and dismantle its architecture.
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Scott Shackford / Hit & Run:
'Aaron's Law' Proponents Talk About Restraining Prosecutorial Abuse