Top News:
Amy Gahran / Knight Digital Media Center:
Teaching media entrepreneurship: What works, and what gets in the way — Entrepreneurship is turning out to be a key skill for having a successful journalism career — and indeed, for building the future of journalism. In the last few years, some U.S. journalism schools have begun adding courses …
Sam Kirkland / Poynter:
Why news organizations shouldn't write off tablet magazines — Jon Lund in GigaOM recently declared tablet magazines a failure. — That's true in the sense that they haven't substantially impacted overall magazine circulation. Using Alliance of Audited Media numbers, Lund lists the percentages that …
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The newsonomics of 10 ways we'll judge 2014 — At the World Publishing Expo held in Berlin this week, two CEOs of major international news companies — Andrew Miller of The Guardian and Mathias Döpfner of Axel Springer — were asked a question: On a scale of one to 10 …
Discussion:
@betheleri
Evelyn M. Rusli / Wall Street Journal:
Google's New Ad Star: You — Google Inc. plans to make its users the stars of advertisements—without first asking for permission. The move encourages word-of-mouth marketing but is bound to raise privacy alarms. The search giant on Friday alerted users in a bright blue warning across its home page that …
Discussion:
TechCrunch
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Kashmir Hill / Forbes:
How To Opt Out Of Google's Plan To Sell Your Endorsements To Advertisers
How To Opt Out Of Google's Plan To Sell Your Endorsements To Advertisers
Discussion:
Mashable, The Atlantic Wire, TechnoBuffalo, CNET, Hillicon Valley, @mattcutts, 9to5Google and New York Times
Jonathan Freedland / Guardian:
The secret state is just itching to gag the press — Get regulation wrong, and it won't be tales of Cheryl Cole that are censored, but revelations like those of Edward Snowden — It's the readers I feel sorry for. How, one wonders, are those who follow Britain's noisiest newspapers …
Discussion:
Guardian, @stephentall, Big News Network.com, Telegraph and @sulliview
Kyle Russell / Business Insider:
Glenn Fleishman's reader-supported The Magazine celebrates its first year — How ‘The New Yorker For Tech Geeks’ Has Survived A Year On Apple's Newsstand — The world of publishing is currently going through a major period of change. Publishers are constantly starting up, closing, or trying out some new business model.
Discussion:
Guardian, @takalabtime and @glennf
Joan E. Solsman / CNET:
Broadcasters petition Supreme Court in Aereo fight — Aereo's arrays of dime-sized antennae. — (Credit: Aereo) — Television broadcasters Friday petitioned the US Supreme Court to get involved in their fight against Aereo, the online service that streams their over-the-air programming to its paying members.
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Joe Flint / Los Angeles Times:
Cablevision blasts broadcasters' Supreme Court filing against Aereo — Cablevision Systems Corp., a New York-based cable operator, blasted the arguments made by broadcasters in a Supreme Court filing seeking to shut down Aereo, a start-up company that delivers local television station signals to consumers via the Internet.
Trudy Lieberman / Columbia Journalism Review:
Reviewing Obamacare coverage: Week 2 — Stewart-Sebelius is the splashy story, but there's lot of interesting state and local coverage — The splashy Obamacare media story of the week was Jon Stewart's Daily Show interview with Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius Monday night.
Laura Hudson / Wired:
How TV Finally Returned to Afghanistan After 30 Years of Censorship — In the opening scene of the documentary film The Network, journalist Ahmad Shafi describes watching a public execution in Kabul during the Taliban regime: “That had become the only entertainment in the city.
Discussion:
@laura_hudson
Marek Miller / INMA:
Why Financial Times left the App Store, switched to HTML5 — Two weeks before the INMA European Conference in Berlin, INMA spoke to Graham Hinchly, engineering manager from Financial Times Labs. Hinchly will speak in Berlin on the topic of why HTML5 and responsive design should matter to publishers.
Jacob Mikanowski / The New Yorker Blog:
Dunhuang: A Secret Library, Digitally Excavated — Just over a thousand years ago, someone sealed up a chamber in a cave outside the oasis town of Dunhuang, on the edge of the Gobi Desert in western China. The chamber was filled with more than five hundred cubic feet of bundled manuscripts.
Discussion:
@bl_bens