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1:05 PM ET, July 26, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Pearson puts FT Group's Mergermarket up for sale  —  • Company is exploring possibility of selling off financial intelligence business  —  • Chief executive John Fallon insists Financial Times remains valued part of business and is not for sale  —  • FT Group reports flat revenues of £217m in first half of year
RELATED:
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Ebooks now make up 33 percent of Penguin's US revenue  —  Ebooks accounted for 33 percent of Penguin's U.S. revenue in the first half of 2013, parent company Pearson reported Friday, up from 31 percent this time last year.  Worldwide, ebooks made up 21 percent of Penguin's revenue, up from 19 percent last year.
Simon Zekaria / Wall Street Journal:
Pearson Posts Loss as Restructuring Continues
Discussion: Pearson
Brian Fung / Wonkblog:
Why Bradley Manning's court-martial matters for civilians  —  Can a government employee be convicted of espionage for leaking classified information to the media?  The Obama administration has charged at least seven individuals with violations of the Espionage Act, but so far none of those cases have been ruled on by a judge or jury.
Discussion: Kirk LaPointe's … and Guardian
RELATED:
Xeni Jardin / Boing Boing:
Bradley Manning trial judge increased press security “because of repeat violations of the rules of court”
Gloria Goodale / Christian Science Monitor:   How Bradley Manning's ‘aiding the enemy’ charge could jolt journalism
RELATED:
Miguel Helft / Fortune:
Laurene Powell Jobs backs ambitious media site  —  Ozy Media will create content for the so-called change generation.  —  FORTUNE — Laurene Powell Jobs, the intensely private widow of Steve Jobs, has teamed up with other Silicon Valley luminaries to back an ambitious new journalism site dubbed Ozy Media.
Devlin Barrett / Wall Street Journal:
U.S. Says Snowden Wouldn't Face Death Penalty  —  Holder Also Rules Out Torture in Bid to Reassure Russia  —  WASHINGTON—U.S. authorities say National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden wouldn't face the death penalty—and also promise he wouldn't be tortured—in a new letter hoping …
Joe Pompeo / Capital New York:
‘Post’ editor Col Allan being sent to Australia to guide News Corp. papers there  —  New York Post editor-in-chief Col Allan is leaving the paper—temporarily at least.  —  The tabloid's top man is being shipped off to his native Australia to provide “extra editorial leadership” …
Erik Wemple:
Sponsored content confusion: PolitiFact R.I. raps BuzzFeed for toothpaste thing  —  It's a challenge of which fact-checking trainees dream.  On July 14, BuzzFeed published a list — 11 Awesome Facts You Never Knew About Rhode Island — that included one hilarious assertion: “In Providence …
Caroline O'Donovan / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Journalists and their funders: Whose job is it to measure impact, and how should it be done?  —  Chuck Lewis didn't mean to become the Yoda of nonprofit journalism — it just sort of happened that way.  He was a reporter for decades before founding his first nonprofit, the Center for Public Integrity …
Sarah Marshall / Journalism.co.uk:
New approaches to online video at the Wall Street Journal  —  Lessons in first-person interactive video from the WSJ  —  Copyright: Image by openDemocracy on Flickr.  Some rights reserved  —  The Wall Street Journal earlier this month published a four-minute interactive video to explain changes …
Discussion: eMedia Vitals
Craig Newmark / The Huffington Post:
Trustworthy Journalism in a Fact-checking-free World  —  Getting real about trustworthy journalism  —  Okay, I really just want news I can trust.  —  Couple years ago, I blurted out that “the press should be the immune system of democracy.”  —  Personally, I really don't like being lied to …
Discussion: @buzenberg, @mathewi and @ariannahuff
Rob Evans / Guardian:
Prince Charles's letters: judges allow appeal against block on publication  —  High court judges give the Guardian right to challenge cabinet move to keep secret so-called ‘black spider memos’  —  Three high court judges have given permission for an appeal to be mounted against a decision …
Salvador Rodriguez / Los Angeles Times:
Google ends Chromecast-Netflix promotion ‘due to overwhelming demand’  —  Citing overwhelming demand, Google on Thursday said it has ended a Netflix promotion tied to its new Chromecast TV dongle.  —  The promotion gave users, new and existing, three free months of Netflix's video streaming service …
RELATED:
Dan Nosowitz / Popular Science:
The One True Streaming TV Device
Discussion: Wired, Mediashift and VentureBeat
Justin McLachlan / FishbowlDC:
Groundswell, the Conservative Journolist?  —  A few years ago, conservatives were in an uproar over the now presumably-defunct Journolist, the clubby listserv for liberal journos created by WaPo's Ezra Klein.  So how will they feel about Groundswell, a conservative cloak and dagger group revealed …
Discussion: Gawker
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
BSkyB annual results: Now TV ‘day pass’ sales hit 50,000  —  • Sky's total TV customers rise to 10.4m as results for year to end of June see pre-tax profits rise 5.7% to £1.26bn  —  • Sky announces Now TV box for £9.99, allowing non-Sky subscribers to connect TV to internet
Herald Sun:
Photog charged over topless photos of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge holidaying in France  —  A photographer suspected of having taken topless photographs of the wife of Britain's Prince William published last September in French magazine “Closer” was charged in June, sources close to the case told AFP.
 
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 More News: 
Agence France Presse:
Franco-US photographer held in Syria released
Susan Berfield / Businessweek:
The End: Barnes & Noble in Silicon Valley
Discussion: New Yorker
William Alden / DealBook:
Activision in $8.2 Billion Deal to Buy Back Stake From Vivendi
Discussion: Bloomberg, Forbes and Reuters
World News Publishing Focus:
Publishers pressured to promise ad viewability after study finds half of ads do not appear
Ted Johnson / Variety:
House Lawmaker Mounts New Push for Radio Performance Right
Matt Wilstein / Mediaite:
The Wire's David Simon: Koch Brothers Buying Newspapers ‘Last Nail In The Coffin’ For Print Journalism
Discussion: AdAge and Politico
 Earlier Picks: 
Sara Morrison / The Wrap:
Fired KTVU Producer in Asiana Gaffe: ‘My Hard-Earned Reputation is Intack’ (Exclusive)
Linda S. Morris / Macon Telegraph:
McClatchy reports lower profits, revenues in second quarter
Discussion: bizjournals and Sacramento Bee
Adrienne LaFrance / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Gawker is letting readers rewrite headlines and reframe articles
 

 
From Techmeme:

Thomas Barrabi / New York Post:
Google fires 28 employees over their participation in a 10-hour sit-in at the company's New York and Sunnyvale offices to protest its business ties with Israel

Kyle Wiggers / TechCrunch:
The US CFPB fines BloomTech, formerly Lambda School, and CEO Austen Allred $164K and bans BloomTech from lending for 10 years over deceiving students on loans

Brian Heater / TechCrunch:
Boston Dynamics debuts an electric version of humanoid robot Atlas for commercial use, a day after retiring the hydraulic Atlas, with a pilot starting in 2025

 
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