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1:15 PM ET, August 16, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
AOL Starts Patch Cuts, and Up to 500 People May Lose Their Jobs  —  AOL has begun making mass layoffs at its Patch unit.  —  By the time the cuts are over, AOL could end up reducing the local news network's 1,000-worker labor force by half, according to people familiar with the plans.
Barton Gellman / Washington Post:
NSA broke privacy rules thousands of times per year, audit finds  —  The National Security Agency has broken privacy rules or overstepped its legal authority thousands of times each year since Congress granted the agency broad new powers in 2008, according to an internal audit and other top-secret documents.
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Carol D. Leonnig / Washington Post:
Court: Ability to police U.S. spying program limited  —  The leader of the secret court that is supposed to provide critical oversight of the government's vast spying programs said that its ability do so is limited and that it must trust the government to report when it improperly spies on Americans.
Zeke J Miller / TIME:
GOP Votes To Punish Networks Over Clinton Projects Read more: http://swampland.time.com/2013/08/16/ gop-will-vote-to-punish-networks-over- clinton-projects-friday/#ixzz2c985qBdX  —  The vote to boycott CNN and NBC as debate sponsors is expected to pass easily  —  Republican leaders will vote Friday …
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Dylan Byers / Politico:
RNC's NBC, CNN boycott win for Univision  —  In a highly anticipated move, the Republican National Committee voted unanimously on Friday to deny NBC and CNN the rights to host or sponsor a Republican primary debate unless they cancel their respective Hillary Clinton film projects.
Discussion: Mediaite
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:
Edward Snowden To HuffPost: Media Being Misled  —  NEW YORK — National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden wants to set the record straight after individuals associated with his father have, in his words, “misled” journalists into “printing false claims about my situation.”
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Reuters:
Former Sun-Times owner ordered to pay $4.1 million  —  The Securities and Exchange Commission has banned former Sun-Times owner Conrad Black from acting as a director of a U.S. company and said he must pay $4.1 million in restitution in a settlement that ends a long-standing lawsuit …
RELATED:
BBC:   Conrad Black fined and banned by US
Gavriel Hollander / Press Gazette:
Nick Davies joins Paul Lewis in Guardian's US team as paper bolsters stateside reporting corps  —  Investigative reporter Nick Davies is set to move to Los Angeles to join The Guardian's burgeoning US team.  —  Davies, the author of Flat Earth News, shot to prominence with his revelations …
Discussion: FishbowlNY
Jack Shafer:
News never made money, and is unlikely to  —  Sometime in the mid-1990s, the Web began to peel from the daily American newspaper bundle its most commercial elements, essentially the editorial sections against which advertisements could be reliably sold.  Coverage of sports, business and market news …
Anna Clark / Columbia Journalism Review:
Does Gannett think its own papers matter?  —  As job cuts hit the chain, coverage—and answers—are in short supply  —  DETROIT, MI — Want to learn what the deal is with the hundreds of layoffs unfolding at Gannett newspapers across the country?  You can get slivers of the story …
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
BBC payoffs will not be investigated by Metropolitan police  —  Conservative MP Rob Wilson had called for an inquiry into six-figure severance payments to former corporation executives  —  Scotland Yard has decided not to mount a criminal investigation into severance payments at the BBC …
Meg James / Los Angeles Times:
CW launches CW Seed digital studio  —  The CW television network on Thursday launched with four Web series, including “The P.E.T. Squad Files,” about a group of misfits searching for ghosts.  (CW)  —  CW Seed, an experimental digital entertainment studio and website, launched Thursday with four original Web shows.
Anadolu Agency:
Foreign journalists not to be accredited without approval of intelligence in Egypt  —  Egypt will give accreditation to foreign journalists with the approval of Egyptian intelligence and Ministry of Interior as of August 15 ANKARA (AA) - Egyptian authorities Friday made amendments …
Discussion: @katalystprods
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Mollie Reilly / The Huffington Post:
How The Washington Post Slapped Back The White House  —  The Washington Post gave a peek on Thursday night into the ways in which it brushed back the White House during contentious negotiations over its bombshell story about the National Security Agency's repeated privacy violations.
Rachel Bartlett / Journalism.co.uk:
Medium: One year of publishing ‘things that matter’  —  Since launching in private beta last year, Medium has been building up its platform, which aims to offer a simple but ‘beautiful’ reading and writing experience  — Read more  —  Other top stories  —  Also on Journalism.co.uk...
Discussion: @fmanjoo
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
Sony and Viacom Reach Tentative Internet TV Deal  —  Viacom has tentatively agreed to let its popular cable channels — like Nickelodeon and MTV — be carried by an Internet TV service in the works at Sony, a deal that could signal the start of a new era of competition for entrenched cable and satellite providers.
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 More News: 
Economist:
Digital media: Counting the change
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Meet the man who is building a hyperlocal aggregation platform for the Chicago Sun-Times
Discussion: Poynter and @jason_pontin
C. Custer / Tech in Asia:
A Chinese Wikipedia editor is banned from leaving China until 2016
Gavin Aronsen / Mother Jones:
Meet the Journalist Spreading Michael Hastings Conspiracy Theories
Ben Fritz / Wall Street Journal:
Disney Tries Anew to Raise Its Score on Digital Games
Tim Peterson / AdAge:
YouTube's Biggest Critic on How the Site Could Lose Creators
 Earlier Picks: 
Peter Lauria / BuzzFeed:
NBC Says Advertisers Committed To Olympics, No Slowdown In Demand
Discussion: @peterlauria3
Hamish McKenzie / PandoDaily:
The Next Web sheds key staff amid shift in editorial priorities
Kara Bloomgarden-Smoke / The New York Observer:
Maer Roshan Joins Board of Directors at Assignmint.com
Philip Bump / The Atlantic Wire:
Syrian Hackers Use Outbrain to Target The Washington Post, Time, and CNN
 

 
From Techmeme:

Kif Leswing / CNBC:
Nvidia announces Blackwell, a new generation of AI chips available later in 2024, starting with the GB200 superchip, which pairs two B200 GPUs with a Grace CPU

Samuel Tolbert / Windows Central:
Valve debuts Steam Families in beta, allowing a group of up to six Steam users to share their games, manage parental controls, and more

Sean Michael Kerner / VentureBeat:
Stability AI debuts Stable Video 3D, a generative AI tool built on its Stable Video Diffusion model, letting users create 3D video from a text or image prompt

 
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