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1:15 PM ET, August 21, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Steven Erlanger / New York Times:
British Newspaper Has Advantages in Battle With Government Over Secrets  —  LONDON — Alan Rusbridger, the mop-haired, soft-spoken editor of The Guardian newspaper, finds himself in a shadowy battle with the British government over purloined secrets that the government will have a hard time winning in the Internet age.
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Christoph Scheuermann / Spiegel Online:
The Cozy Relationship between Britain and its Intelligence Apparatus  —  A Commentary by Christoph Scheuermann  —  Most in Britain seem unconcerned about the mass surveillance carried out by its intelligence agency GCHQ.  Even the intimidation tactics being used on the Guardian this week have caused little soul-searching.
Nicholas Watt / Guardian:
Guardian told to destroy NSA files for national security, says Clegg  —  Clegg's spokesman confirms that Sir Jeremy Heywood made request on instructions of David Cameron  —  Nick Clegg has endorsed the government's decision to ask the Guardian to destroy leaked secret NSA documents …
Gabriela Baczynska / Reuters:   Russia criticizes Britain over pressure on Guardian
Jay Rosen / Pressthink:
Conspiracy to commit journalism
ACLU:
ACLU Comment on Bradley Manning Sentence  —  NEW YORK - A military court-martial today sentenced Pfc. Bradley Manning to 35 years in prison for giving classified material to WikiLeaks.  Ben Wizner, director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Speech, Privacy & Technology Project, had this reaction:
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Jesse Hicks / The Verge:
Bradley Manning sentenced to 35 years in prison for WikiLeaks disclosures
Bmaz / emptywheel:   Bradley Manning's Sentence, Parole and Appeal Implications
Vindu Goel / New York Times:
Facebook Leads an Effort to Lower Barriers to Internet Access  —  MENLO PARK, Calif. — About one of every seven people in the world uses Facebook.  Now, Mark Zuckerberg, its co-founder and chief executive, wants to make a play for the rest — including the four billion or so who lack Internet access.
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Dylan Byers / Politico:
Fox News firing tied to Ailes book  —  The decision last month by Fox News chief Roger Ailes to fire his top communications executive, Brian Lewis, was due to a number of factors, including what the network's parent company 21st Century Fox has described as “financial irregularities” and breaches of contract.
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Katherine Fung / The Huffington Post:
Al Jazeera English Receiving ‘Thousands’ Of Complaints From Viewers  —  Al Jazeera English has received “thousands” of complaints from viewers over the end of its livestream in the United States, the channel said Wednesday.  —  The channel stopped broadcasting and streaming online in the U.S …
Discussion: Washington Post
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Janko Roettgers / GigaOM:
Al Jazeera hints at new online programming for cord cutters and cable hold-outs
Jeff John Roberts / GigaOM:
Comcast says copyright threat to TorrentFreak an “error”  —  Internet giant Comcast claims that a legal threat directed at TorrentFreak was a mistake and that it has told the file-sharing news site to disregard it:  —  “This notice was sent in error, and we have advised TorrentFreak to disregard it.
Barb Darrow / GigaOM:
Huffington Post to end anonymous comments  —  The Huffington Post which has logged more than 260 million comments in its history will end anonymity in those comments, founder Arianna Huffington said Wednesday morning.  —  “Trolls are just getting more and more aggressive and uglier …
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Bloomberg News review suggests standards editor, ombudsman  —  Former New York Times public editor Clark Hoyt reviewed Bloomberg News' newsroom operations following revelations last May that the company's journalists had improperly accessed data about Bloomberg's data customers.
Discussion: FishbowlNY and Talking Biz News
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Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Is Google Ready to Buy Its Way Into TV With an NFL Deal?  —  Here's a fun combination to ponder: The world's most powerful media company and America's most popular sport.  —  That could happen if Google buys the rights to the NFL's Sunday Ticket package, the all-you-can-eat subscription-TV service currently owned by DirecTV.
Lucia Moses / Adweek:
News Corp Launches Global Private Ad Exchange  —  News Corp today announced plans to launch a global programmatic ad exchange that will let advertisers buy across its more than 50 online and mobile products including WSJ.com, Times.co.uk and NYPost.com.  —  The move is only the latest …
Discussion: Guardian and News Corp
Joe Flint / Los Angeles Times:
Layoffs to hit Disney/ABC TV Group  —  Disney is making cuts at its Disney/ABC Television Group.  (Walt Disney Co.)  —  The Disney/ABC Television Group, which includes the ABC network, local TV stations and the Disney Channel and ABC Family cable networks, is restructuring its operations, which will result in layoffs across the unit.
Discussion: Reuters and TVSpy
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
Las Vegas Sun could disappear, editor says in suit  —  Las Vegas Sun Editor and Publisher Brian Greenspun filed a suit Tuesday “alleging his own family members conspired with Stephens Media, operator of the Las Vegas Review-Journal, to end a Joint Operating Agreement that has been in place …
Rachel Bartlett / Journalism.co.uk:
A look at Storyful's Open Newsroom verification project  —  A look at the first two months of the project, which involves a Google+ community working together to verify content shared online  —  A couple of months ago the team at social newswire Storyful took to Google+ with its Open Newsroom initiative …
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Maker Studios Buys Blip, and a Home Outside of YouTube  —  Maker Studios, one of the biggest YouTube networks, is buying Blip, a video maker and distributor.  —  Blip officials informed their staff of the deal this morning, and it is expected to close in early September.
Discussion: Variety
Jason Felch / Los Angeles Times:
O.C. Register owner Aaron Kushner bets heavily on print  —  As other publishers prepare for a digital-only future, Kushner adds staff and expands his newspaper.  This week he launched the Long Beach Register.  —  Long Beach resident Antonio Romero reads the inaugural edition of the Long Beach Register in front of the Queen Mary.
 
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 More News: 
Mallary Jean Tenore / Poynter:
How two young journalists are highlighting longform journalism written by women
Janko Roettgers / GigaOM:
Here's how Beats Music is curating its subscription service
Discussion: Guardian, Dave Winer and Pocket-lint
Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
Exaronews investigative journalism site abandons paywall
Discussion: Journalism.co.uk and Jon Slattery
Todd Spangler / Variety:
New York Times Stages Online Indie Film Fest With L.A.'s Film Independent (Exclusive)
Guardian:
Journalists under threat in Egypt
Ari Altstedter / Bloomberg:
No Bezos Bait Means Postmedia to Torstar Slump
Nina Burleigh / The New York Observer:
You Leak, You Lose: Going to Prison for Acts of Journalism
Discussion: bookforum.com
Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
European broadcasters shut down emergency Greek TV service
Discussion: New Zealand Herald and BBC
 Earlier Picks: 
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
You Tell Netflix What You Want to Watch, and Now It Tells You What You Really Want to Watch
Tara Conlan / Guardian:
BBC boss in charge of Digital Media Initiative got £140,000 in bonuses
Discussion: MWD
Roy Greenslade / Guardian:
San Francisco paper took $500,000 with paywall before taking it down
Discussion: Poynter
Hannah Karp / Wall Street Journal:
Vevo in Deals With Apple, Samsung for TV Programming
Reg Chua / (Re)Structuring Journalism:
What Price Efficiency?  —  There's been so much ink (pixels? …
Discussion: Fast Company
Alex Wilhelm / TechCrunch:
New Revelations Detail How The NSA Scans 75% Of The Internet Through Telco Partnerships