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7:35 AM ET, July 11, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
David Streitfeld / New York Times:
E-Book Ruling Gives Amazon an Advantage  —  Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, loves disrupting markets.  In that regard, he must be having a delightful summer.  The book business, once so mired in the past it seemed part of the antiques trade, is up for grabs.
RELATED:
Reuters:
Judge says Apple conspired to raise prices on e-books
New York Times:
To Cut Taxes, Tribune Is to Split Into Broadcasting and Publishing Units  —  The Tribune Company's decision to divide itself into separate broadcast and publishing companies may help avoid a big tax bill, but the split does not address the bigger problem facing newspaper executives: buyers just do not want to spend on print.
RELATED:
Katherine Fung / The Huffington Post:
Charles Koch: Tribune Newspaper Bid Is 'Not On The Front Burner, But It's Possible'  —  In his first public statement about the Tribune Company newspapers, Charles Koch said in an interview published Tuesday that “it's possible” that his company will make a bid.
Bloomberg:
Eisner Predicts Hulu to Lose Next-Day TV Rights Post-Sale  —  The buyers of Hulu LLC will lose next-day rights to television shows that the service now enjoys under its current owners, Michael Eisner, former chairman of Walt Disney Co., said in an interview.
Discussion: TBI Vision
John Plunkett / Guardian:
Former BBC DG's email outlines deputy's ‘maximum payment’ to trust  —  Message from Mark Thompson's office reveals further details of Mark Byford's controversial £949,000 redundancy payoff  —  Mark Byford: the former BBC deputy director general received a £949,000 payoff.
RELATED:
Jan Schaffer / Nieman Journalism Lab:
In St. Louis, two news organizations are navigating the tricky path to a merger  —  If all goes as hoped, in coming months St. Louis Public Radio (SLPR) and the St. Louis Beacon will formally merge their two newsrooms.  It will be the first time a public radio station with a staff of journalists …
Discussion: @cmatthewsnyc
Telegraph:
Ahmed Assem: the Egyptian photographer who chronicled his own death  —  The grainy film captures the soldier as he shoots from his vantage point on top of the yellow stone building.  —  He fires more than once and then, suddenly, turns the rifle and points toward the camera lens.
David Dishneau / Associated Press:
Harvard professor says leaks changed WikiLeaks' image  —  FORT MEADE, Md. — An Army private's leak of classified information to WikiLeaks changed how the public, the government and traditional news media perceived the anti-secrecy organization — from a legitimate journalistic enterprise …
RELATED:
Ian Simpson / Reuters:
Defense rests in court-martial of soldier accused of WikiLeaks disclosures
Lucas Shaw / The Wrap:
Blip Hires Former Tumblr and Gawker Editor Chris Mohney to Oversee Programming  —  Blip has hired former Tumblr executive Chris Mohney as its vice president of programming, the digital video network said Wednesday.  Blip created this position for Mohney, who will oversee all editorial content for the company's site.
Discussion: Adweek and SocialTimes
Otto Sjöberg / INMA:
How fast is the mobile revolution changing the world?  Ask the Smartphone Generation  —  To be relevant for millennials, a.k.a. the Smartphone Generation, news organisations have to stay on top of not just the latest device, but also privacy issues, Big Data, technology education, and more.
Harry McCracken / TIME:
PCWorld Exits Print, and the Era of Computer Magazines Ends  —  The last of the big general-interest PC magazines is no longer a magazine.  —  By Harry McCracken @harrymccrackenJuly 11, 2013  —  The news isn't shocking.  In fact, it's sort of a shock it didn't happen several years ago.
Discussion: Folio and Talking Biz News
Alastair Reid / Journalism.co.uk:
New York Times and Telegraph launch Kindle Fire apps  —  NYT looks to expand Android market while the Telegraph adds new features as the platform is integrated into existing subscription models The New York Times app includes free access to all sections until the end of July.
Sam Thielman / Adweek:
Zucker's Changes at CNN Are Already Bearing Fruit  —  The good ship CNN is riding a little higher on the waves.  After months of plummeting ratings and a high-profile game of C-suite musical chairs, the original cable news network is catching up to its competitors in the core demo and showing significant year-over-year gains.
Discussion: Boing Boing
RELATED:
Laura Bennett / New Republic:
CNN Is Bad at Tabloid Journalism
Greg Sandoval / The Verge:
Boston broadcaster latest to sue Aereo for copyright violations  —  WCVB in Boston makes many of the same arguments against web TV service that two federal courts rejected in Manhattan  —  Add Hearst to the names of traditional media companies trying to stop Aereo from expanding its web TV service.
 
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 More News: 
Andrew Green / Reuters:
South Sudan backs plans to boost press freedom, reporters wary
Ryan Faughnder / Los Angeles Times:
University Internet TV service Tivli raises $6 million to expand
Eliza Kern / GigaOM:
To win over media, Instagram to provide embeds for photo, video
Katy Bachman / Adweek:
If Publishers Fail to Self-Regulate Native Ads, FTC May Step In
Discussion: AdExchanger and eMedia Vitals
Ryan Chittum / Columbia Journalism Review:
Reuters feeds the robots two-second scoops
Discussion: Online NewsHour
 Earlier Picks: 
Melissa Korn / Wall Street Journal:
CEO Re-Imagines NPR as a Pandora of News
Discussion: NetNewsCheck Latest
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
‘Times’ cuts one of its three New York City editions
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
Justine Rosenthal, long-time deputy of Tina Brown, is out at ‘Newsweek’
Lydia DePillis / Washington Post:
Barnes & Noble's troubles don't show why bookstores are doomed. They show how they'll survive.