Top News:
David Barrett / Telegraph:
David Miranda was carrying password for secret files on piece of paper — A journalist's partner who was detained carrying thousands of British intelligence documents through Heathrow airport was also holding the password to an encrypted file written on a piece of paper, the government has disclosed.
Discussion:
Joshua Foust, Business Insider, Softpedia News, The Independent, @harrisj, Politico, New York Magazine and @jayrosen_nyu
RELATED:
Mark Hosenball / Reuters:
UK asked N.Y. Times to destroy Snowden material — (Reuters) - The British government has asked the New York Times to destroy copies of documents leaked by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden related to the operations of the U.S. spy agency and its British partner …
Discussion:
Mediaite, @jayrosen_nyu, @mattwaite and @jesselynradack
Robert Booth / Guardian:
UK took three weeks to act over data at New York Times, says Guardian — Alan Rusbridger hits back at Downing Street's claims in high court that it ‘urgently’ needed access to leaked GCHQ files — The British government took over three weeks to act on authoritative information …
Discussion:
@fredriklaurin, @rydermc, @kgosztola, The Switch, Le·gal In·sur·rec· tion, @dangillmor, @jamesrbuk, @ncilla and Softpedia News
Rosie Gray:
British Embassy Approached New York Times About Snowden Documents
British Embassy Approached New York Times About Snowden Documents
Discussion:
@buzzfeedben, @rosiegray and @buzzfeedben
Press Gazette:
High Court told Miranda was carrying ‘58,000 highly classified UK intelligence documents’
High Court told Miranda was carrying ‘58,000 highly classified UK intelligence documents’
Discussion:
The Independent, Bloomberg, National Updates, The Atlantic Wire, The Verge, The Register, London24 News and Head of Legal
George Brock / Guardian:
Does David Miranda count as a journalist? That's not the point
Does David Miranda count as a journalist? That's not the point
Discussion:
@megclement
Margaret Sullivan / The Public Editor's Journal:
In News Coverage and Editorials on Syria, How Much Skepticism in The Times? — Many Times readers are looking at recent news coverage of Syria, and editorials on the same subject, through the lens of another international conflict: the United States invasion of Iraq.
Discussion:
New York Times, Truthout Stories, @ron_fournier, @mdaisey, @kgosztola, Mother Jones, @dangillmor, @freddoso, @aliabunimah, @trevortimm, @justinraimondo, @ledbetreuters, Firedoglake, The Plum Line, The Monkey Cage, Salon, Business Insider, Vanity Fair, The Week, TIME, Pressing Issues, Boing Boing and The Huffington Post
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Alex Weprin / TVNewser:
Network Correspondents Converge On Syria And Surrounding Countries — All eyes are turning to Syria, as escalated rhetoric suggests that a U.S. attack could be imminent. Unlike Iraq, which saw correspondents reporting while embedded with U.S. troops or from the balcony of their hotels …
Discussion:
@yancyfaith, FishbowlDC and FishbowlNY
Sara Morrison / The Wrap:
Syria Crisis: How the Networks Are Covering
Syria Crisis: How the Networks Are Covering
Discussion:
Mediaite, The New Yorker Blog, Hollywood Reporter and @saramorrison
Nora Caplan-Bricker / The New Republic:
A Guide to Syria's Best Citizen Journalism
A Guide to Syria's Best Citizen Journalism
Discussion:
@syriatracker, KPBS San Diego, Wonkblog, Kirk LaPointe's …, @millermena and The Huffington Post
Hannah Karp / Wall Street Journal:
Cumulus Radio Deal Could Crowd Clear Channel — Radio broadcaster Cumulus Media Inc. is close to acquiring one of the country's largest syndicators of radio programming, Dial Global Inc., according to people familiar with the matter, in a deal that is likely to shake up the industry's competitive landscape.
Discussion:
@ethanwsj, Radio Ink Magazine, Reuters, NetNewsCheck Latest and AllAccess.com
RELATED:
Jeff Bercovici / Forbes:
Looking To Radio's Future, Cumulus Media Buys Syndicator Dial Global
Looking To Radio's Future, Cumulus Media Buys Syndicator Dial Global
Discussion:
New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Billboard, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Businessweek and Benzinga
Lucia Moses / Adweek:
People Mag Prepares New Subscription Model — Time Inc. cash cow People is preparing to unveil a new pricing model designed to transform the way people think about subscriptions, according to people familiar with the publisher's plans. Other titles in the company are expected to follow suit.
Discussion:
FishbowlNY
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Erik Maza / WWD:
Time Inc. CEO Laura Lang to Exit in September
Ian Burrell / The Independent:
Censure for reporter over Gaza tweet sparks BBC rethink over social media — Governing body calls for rethink over use of Twitter but journalists worry about losing credibility — The censure of a senior BBC correspondent over his use of Twitter in covering the Middle East …
Discussion:
@jeffjarvis, @scottbix, @daschles and @colrichardkemp
Mike Isaac / AllThingsD:
Twitter General Counsel Alexander Macgillivray to Leave Company — Twitter's free speech defender is leaving the nest. — Alexander Macgillivray, Twitter's general counsel and chief navigator of its thorny digital First Amendment issues, is departing the company.
Discussion:
bricoleur, Guardian, SlashGear, NYT Bits, Los Angeles Times, The Verge, ReadWrite, CNET, @trevortimm, @mikeisaac, TechCrunch, GigaOM, Betabeat, Mashable, Hillicon Valley and Digits
Joshua Benton / Nieman Journalism Lab:
New York Times improves its recommendations engine — Discussions about the future of news often feature a dystopian, filter-bubbly argument: Let people personalize the news they consume and it'll kill the common conversation essential to democracy. — I've always been suspicious of that argument.
Discussion:
The Next Web and @niemanlab
Laura Hazard Owen / paidContent:
Digital now makes up 11.3% of Hachette's revenues worldwide, and 20% of Random House's — Digital now accounts for 11.3 percent of Hachette's sales worldwide, and about 20 percent of Random House's — Lagardére, parent company of book publisher Hachette, and Bertelsmann …
Discussion:
Speakeasy, GalleyCat, Media & Entertainment, PublishersWeekly.com, Variety and Hollywood Reporter
David S. Cohen / Variety:
Closing Piracy Powerhouse Actually Hurt Movie Revenues — Only blockbusters benefitted from shutdown of Megaupload; grosses of mid-range pics declined — Closing the notorious piracy site Megaupload didn't help theatrical film grosses , according to a new study.
Discussion:
@onthemedia and Digits
Adrienne LaFrance / Nieman Journalism Lab:
Columbia is launching a new post-bac program to breed journalism unicorns — The journalism unicorn exists. I've seen one — even worked with one. Maybe you know the kind: a journalist who's as nimble and dynamic as a reporter as she is with coding. — Yes, journalism unicorns are out there …
Discussion:
@emilybell, @sisiwei, @kleinmatic, @greglinch, @derekwillis and Tow Center for Digital …
Jim Romenesko:
[UPDATED] Society of Professional Journalists considers changing its name to Society for Professional Journalism — SPJ is considering changing its name from Society of Professional Journalists to Society for Professional Journalism. [My error: My original post had OF, not FOR.]
Discussion:
@scottleadingham and @justinsilverman
Meg James / Los Angeles Times:
L.A. City Council to debate Time Warner Cable-CBS blackout — The Los Angeles City Council plans to wade into the contentious contract dispute between Time Warner Cable and CBS Corp., which has led to a four-week blackout of local CBS stations in more than 1 million homes in Los Angeles.