Check out Mini-Mediagazer for simple mobiles or Mediagazer Mobile for modern smartphones.
10:25 PM ET, September 5, 2013

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Guardian:
US and UK spy agencies defeat privacy and security on the internet  —  US and British intelligence agencies have successfully cracked much of the online encryption relied upon by hundreds of millions of people to protect the privacy of their personal data, online transactions and emails …
RELATED:
ProPublica:
Why We Published the Decryption Story  —  ProPublica is today publishing a story in partnership with the Guardian and The New York Times about U.S. and U.K. government efforts to decode enormous amounts of Internet traffic previously thought to have been safe from prying eyes.
Bruce Schneier / Guardian:
The US government has betrayed the internet  —  The NSA has undermined a fundamental social contract.  We engineers built the internet - and now we have to fix it  —  Government and industry have betrayed the internet, and us.  —  By subverting the internet at every level to make it a vast …
Timothy B. Lee / The Switch:
Sorry, Jeff Bezos, the news bundle isn't coming back  —  This week, journalists at The Washington Post (including, full disclosure, me) got our first look at our new boss's vision for The Washington Post.  There was a lot to like.  Bezos emphasized the importance of a focus on the long term …
RELATED:
Erik Wemple:
Jeff Bezos and the Internet's aggregational appetites
Matt Taibbi / Rolling Stone:
16 Major Firms May Have Received Early Data From Thomson Reuters  —  Readers may recall an ugly story that broke earlier this summer, when New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman rebuked the news/business information firm Thomson Reuters for selling access to key economic survey data …
RELATED:
Steven Erlanger / New York Times:
Britain to Examine Why BBC Severance Payments Exceeded Contract Terms
Discussion: @froomkin
Ben Fritz / Wall Street Journal:
Nikki Finke Seeks to Break From Penske Media  —  Founder of Website Deadline.com Says Vision Is No Longer Shared  —  In the viciously competitive world of Hollywood trade publications, it was hardly a shock when one outlet recently mocked another for its “humiliating loss of readership and influence.”
Farhad Manjoo / Slate:
Changes at the Onion: America's finest news source adjusts to Internet speed  —  What happened to the Onion?  Two words: The Internet.  —  There's a famous episode of This American Life that takes listeners into a planning meeting at the Onion.  It was first broadcast in 2008 …
Discussion: @stefanjbecket
Stephanie Bodoni / Bloomberg:
Google Says Mosley Suit Over Sex-Party Search Defies Free Speech  —  Google Inc. (GOOG) said a lawsuit by Max Mosley, Formula One's former president, asking it to block any further search results referring to a “Nazi-themed” sex party would create unprecedented censorship on the Internet.
RELATED:
Alex Kantrowitz / AdAge:
The New York Post Gets a New Digital Look, And New Ad Units  —  An Improvement Over a Website That Seemed Stuck In the '90s  —  After years of operating a website which seemed to belong in the 1990s, the New York Post introduced a revamped, modern version today, and a set of new ad products to boot.
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
BuzzFeed Aims for $100 Million in Sales 2014  —  Lots of chatter in medialand today about BuzzFeed founder Jonah Peretti's state-of-BuzzFeed memo, which is full of boast-worthy boasts: A ton of page views, a lot of employees, and a profit to boot.  —  One thing that Peretti didn't include in the memo …
Michael Sebastian / AdAge:
Ten Surprising Facts About MailOnline, the Site That Ate the News  —  No. 2 Newspaper Site in U.S. Still Gets Most Ad Revenue From U.K.  —  There are very good odds that you have frequented MailOnline, which has come seemingly out of nowhere to become the most-visited newspaper website …
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
Networks Get a Victory in Court Over Streaming Service  —  For the first time in nearly a year, the nation's major television broadcasters have won a round in their legal battle against start-up firms that stream programs from local stations over the Internet without their consent.
Economist:
Why are The Economist's writers anonymous?  —  The Economist explains itself  —  Why are The Economist's writers anonymous?  —  Sep 4th 2013, 23:50 by ????  —  Editor's note: This week, to mark the 170th anniversary of the appearance of the first issue of The Economist on September 2nd 1843 …
Emma Bazilian / Adweek:
Details Uses Bloggers For Native Advertising: Helps brands like A/X Armani Exchange, Prada promote fall looks  —  In the latest example of a publisher blurring the line between advertising and editorial, Details is tapping its Details Network, a collective of 150 men's style bloggers who share …
Meg Heckman / Poynter:
Software seeks to measure women's participation in journalism  —  Measuring women's participation in journalism once meant sitting down with a stack of newspapers and counting bylines by hand.  That's no longer the case, thanks to computer programs that use big data to examine gender biases in sourcing …
Laura Hazard Owen / GigaOM:
No, seriously: Oyster comes pretty close to being a Netflix for ebooks  —  A lot of startups want to be the Netflix (or Spotify, Pandora, whatever) for ebooks.  That is, they want to provide unlimited access to ebooks for a flat monthly fee.  —  But this is really hard to pull off …
Richard Horgan / FishbowlNY:
Pair of Columbia J-School Alums Officially Join TheWrap  —  All sorts of good things are happening at TheWrap this first week of September.  On Tuesday, the Hollywood industry-focused site launched a complete overhaul of its website, an iteration being referred to as 3.0.
 
 Archived Page Info: 
This is a snapshot of Mediagazer at 10:25 PM ET, September 5, 2013.

View the current page or another snapshot:


 
 See Also: 
Mediagazer: site main
Mediagazer River: reverse chronological Mediagazer
Mediagazer Mobile: for phones
Mediagazer Leaderboard: Mediagazer's top sources
 
 Subscribe: 
Mediagazer RSS feed
Mediagazer on X
Mediagazer on Mastodon
 
 
 More News: 
New York Business Journal:
YouTube live-streaming just one element in shifting Fashion Week
Discussion: 10,000 Words and New York Times
Sasha Chavkin / Columbia Journalism Review:
Déjà news  —  The FCC ignores local TV news' quiet consolidation strategy
Om Malik / GigaOM:
New season, new manager: Tom Krazit is GigaOM's new Executive Editor
Don Davis / Variety:
Mediaset Doing Just Fine Despite Berlusconi Verdict
Lisa O'Carroll / Guardian:
Sun and Mirror journalists unite to show support for colleagues in court
Discussion: Press Gazette and @neilwallis1
 Earlier Picks: 
Kara Swisher / AllThingsD:
Former Yahoo and Microsoft Media Exec Scott Moore Tapped as Cheezburger President and COO
Jack Mirkinson / The Huffington Post:
NSA Media Coverage Skyrocketed In The Wake Of Snowden Leaks
Discussion: Mashable
David Yanofsky / Quartz:
Pandora claims not to be particularly worried about the launch of iTunes Radio
Todd Spangler / Variety:
Sony 4K TV Internet Video Service Will Bump Into Bandwidth Caps
Wall Street Journal:
Dish, Disney Gird for Showdown Over ESPN
 

 
From Techmeme:

Mark Gurman / Bloomberg:
Sources: Apple is working on a smart doorbell system with advanced facial recognition that can wirelessly connect and unlock third-party smart locks

Wall Street Journal:
Gina Raimondo says holding back China in the chips race is a “fool's errand”, and investment, more than export controls, will keep US ahead of Beijing

Kevin Roose / New York Times:
A look at Amazon's revamped drone delivery program near Phoenix, Arizona, where the company's new MK-30 drones deliver dozens of packages a day to customers

 
Sister Sites:

Techmeme
 Top news and commentary for technology's leaders, from all around the web
memeorandum
 What US political commentators are discussing online right now
WeSmirch
 The top celebrity news from all around the web on a single page