Top News:
Craig Douglas / Boston Business Journal:
Judge orders NY Times to set aside all Globe proceeds until class action is resolved — The New York Times Co.'s celebration after selling The New England Media Group to John Henry was likely short-lived yesterday, as a Worcester judge has ordered the Gray Lady to set aside all proceeds …
RELATED:
Karis Hustad / Christian Science Monitor:
Kickstarting journalism: Is crowdfunding the answer? — Outlets from National Public Radio to ProPublica have turned to crowdfunding sites such as Kickstarter and Spot.Us to help solve journalism's funding woes and make a bit of online buzz. But is this solution sustainable?
Josh Sternberg / Digiday:
YouTube Takes on The News — Much like the Google News homepage, YouTube's news channel aggregates video news content from some of the biggest - and smallest - broadcasters on earth. Also, like Google News, the channel does not actually produce its own journalism.
Discussion:
@niemanlab
Tim Wu / New Yorker:
Is Ad Avoidance a Problem? — Back in the twentieth century, people were roughly equal in their power to avoid advertising. Only desert hermits and commune dwellers could truly live ad-free. But today, many people cheerfully claim to be total ad-avoiders, and it has become possible …
Sara Morrison / The Wrap:
Nikki Finke Claims to Be Leaving Deadline, Announces NikkiFinke.com — Nikki Finke says she is set to leave the website she founded and start over again at NikkiFinke.com, announcing it on Twitter on Thursday. — “I am building out NikkiFinke.com and will unveil it right after the new year,” she tweeted.
Discussion:
Gawker, BuzzFeed, The Atlantic Wire, Vulture, LA Observed and @thewrap
Karl Bode / DSLreports:
Source: Comcast Launching HBO Broadband Bundle Aimed at Netflix — An insider familiar with Comcast's promotional plans tells DSLreports that the company is preparing a new broadband and HBO streaming bundle aimed squarely at Netflix. The new promotion will be called “Internet Plus,” …
Discussion:
Radio & Television …, Engadget, WebProNews, SlashGear, Digital Trends, The Verge and Gigaom
Josh Gerstein / Politico:
NSA chief: Stop reporters ‘selling’ spy documents — The head of the embattled National Security Agency, Gen. Keith Alexander, is accusing journalists of “selling” his agency's documents and is calling for an end to the steady stream of public disclosures of secrets snatched by former contractor Edward Snowden.
Discussion:
Washington Post, New York Times, Techdirt, New York Magazine and @johnmcquaid
Tom Simonite / MIT Technology Review:
The Decline of Wikipedia — The sixth most widely used website in the world is not run anything like the others in the top 10. It is not operated by a sophisticated corporation but by a leaderless collection of volunteers who generally work under pseudonyms and habitually bicker with each other.
Discussion:
Gigaom, The Verge, SlashGear, @bryanappleyard, The Next Web, Techdirt, The Raw Story and Business Insider
Michael Sebastian / AdAge:
Publishers Confront Digital at Conference: ‘Magazines Are the Original Native Ads’ — Real Competition Isn't Each Other but ‘Other Sources of Distraction’ — Joe Ripp, the newly installed CEO at Time Inc., has spent the first eight weeks on the job firing up his troops for the company's spinoff from Time Warner next year.
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
Vivian Schiller to Leave NBC News for Twitter — In a bid to reinforce Twitter's mutually beneficial relationships with the news industry, the social networking giant on Thursday appointed Vivian Schiller to a newly created position, head of news and journalism partnerships.
Discussion:
@vivianschiller, TVNewser, CNNMoney.com, Los Angeles Times, USA Today, Gigaom, @nytfridge, @claireatki, @vivianschiller, @edmundlee, @felixsalmon, @raju, @marksluckie, @twitterfornews, The Verge, @chloes, Reuters, The Wrap, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, Politico, TechCrunch, Variety, ValueWalk, Digital Media Wire, @rosental, JIMROMENESKO.COM, @nycjim and Poynter
Dominic Ponsford / Press Gazette:
Former News Int chief exec Tom Mockridge said News of the World hacking scandal costs could rise to £1bn — The final cost of the News of the World hacking scandal could rise to £1bn, according to a private assessment made by former News International chief executive Tom Mockridge.
Discussion:
Exaro, exaronews.com/feed/latest, Press Gazette, @domponsford and The Huffington Post
Brian Fung / The Switch:
Inside former NSA chief Michael Hayden's ‘interview’ with an Amtrak live-tweeter — He should've taken the quiet car. — But that's not what Michael Hayden did on Thursday afternoon as he boarded Acela No. 2170, bound for New York. — Instead, the former NSA director nestled …
Laura Hazard Owen / Gigaom:
Amazon Publishing reportedly retreating in NYC. Thank (or blame) Barnes & Noble — When Amazon Publishing launched its general trade imprint in New York in 2011, the goal was to go head-to-head with the big traditional publishers here. The company announced in May of that year …
Ian Burrell / The Independent:
Press announces timetable for ‘toughest regulator in the world’ — The newspaper and magazine industries have announced a timetable for the “toughest regulator anywhere in the developed world” in a move designed to outflank politicians and bypass a Royal Charter on press regulation due to go before the Queen next week.
Discussion:
Press Gazette
RELATED: