Top News:
Peter Osnos / The Atlantic Online:
Can Print Magazines Save Themselves? — Appearing on Charlie Rose in October to promote a celebratory coffee table book, Vanity Fair 100 Years: From the Jazz Age to Our Age, Graydon Carter, who has been the magazine's editor for a successful run of 21 years, paid eloquent tribute to print magazines …
Discussion:
@mathewi
Santiago Lyon / New York Times:
Obama's Orwellian Image Control — THE Internet has been abuzz over the spectacle of President Obama and the prime ministers of Britain and Denmark snapping a photo of themselves — a “selfie,” to use the mot du jour — with a smartphone at the memorial service for Nelson Mandela in South Africa on Tuesday.
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Spotify's Daniel Ek on Competition, Controversy and Crossing Over Into the Mainstream — Spotify has more than 24 million users, and it has converted more than six million of them into paying subscribers. The biggest selling point for the music service: If you pay up, you can listen to us on the go.
Discussion:
@pkafka
RELATED:
Devindra Hardawar / VentureBeat:
Spotify brings free music to all devices (with caveats); snags Led Zeppelin
Spotify brings free music to all devices (with caveats); snags Led Zeppelin
Discussion:
Spotify Blog, New York Times, BGR, NBCNews, AdAge, Newsy, Reuters, App Advice, Bloomberg, Rolling Stone, Media & Entertainment, Betabeat, Variety, CNET, Hollywood Reporter, Mashable, TechCrunch, The Verge, @devindra, Gigaom, Pocket-lint and Telegraph
Bryan Bishop / The Verge:
Twitter becomes a better TV remote control as ABC, AMC, and Fox sign up for See It — It's been obvious for some time that Twitter sees television as a major way in which it can participate in, drive, and profit from the broader cultural conversation. It's about to become an even more useful tool …
Discussion:
Hollywood Reporter and AdAge
RELATED:
Businessweek:
Modern Farmer Combines Serious Coverage With LambCam, Hits Jackpot — As mainstream media outlets struggle to balance a commitment to serious journalism with the public's seemingly insatiable appetite for cute animals, Modern Farmer and ModernFarmer.com are in an enviable position.
Don Reisinger / CNET:
Apple TV gets content boost with Crackle, Watch ABC — Apple has been bulking up its content lineup on the Apple TV, and Wednesday, the company announced still more updates. — Time Warner Cable to add another app platform: Apple TV? — Apple TV a no-show, in any respect, at iPhone event
Discussion:
AllThingsD and The Verge
RELATED:
Janko Roettgers / Gigaom:
Apple TV gets live news programming with Bloomberg TV
Apple TV gets live news programming with Bloomberg TV
Discussion:
TechCrunch, 9to5Mac and @brianstelter
Andrea Peterson / The Switch:
News sites could protect your privacy with encryption. Here's why they probably won't. — “I've basically been trying to bribe media organizations at this point to turn on SSL,” jokes Christopher Soghoian, the principal technologist and a senior policy analyst at the ACLU's Speech, Privacy and Technology Project.
Discussion:
Techdirt, @jcstearns, @aurich, Wired, @arstechnica, @csoghoian, @freedomofpress, @mathewi, Electronista, PandoDaily, ZDNet, The Verge, Engadget and CNET
Colin Campbell / Polygon:
YouTube defends copyright crackdown — Google has responded to widespread outrage at its recent crackdown on game videos on YouTube. — In recent days the company has sent out thousands of copyright infringement notices to video producers of game walk-throughs and Let's Plays.
Discussion:
@ghostrobo, @davidsgallant, @pkollar and The Daily Caller
RELATED:
Stephen Totilo / Kotaku:
YouTube Channels Crippled By Copyright Claims
YouTube Channels Crippled By Copyright Claims
Discussion:
Forbes, Polygon, @levelsio, Tubefilter, @simonhoupt, @jerryandharry, Plagiarism Today, VentureBeat and Marketing Pilgrim
Dan Goodin / Ars Technica:
Swedish journalists appear to use weakness in comment system to expose public figures — Crypto weakness in Web comment system exposes hate-mongering politicians — Journalists exploit weakness in Gravatar to identify extremist forum members. — Investigative journalists have exploited …
Discussion:
Disqus, ITworld.com, @virusbtn and @nzkoz
Hamish McKenzie / PandoDaily:
The new television: How is NimbleTV different from Aereo? — This morning, Aereo CEO Chet Kanojia was in Baltimore to mark the TV-over-the-Internet service's launch in the city, its 10th of 22 cities that it had planned to reach by the end of 2013. (Kanojia now says the company will hit that goal by early 2014.)
Discussion:
CNET and Ars Technica
Kate Tummarello / TheHill:
Privacy groups want AT&T punished for selling data to CIA — Privacy groups are asking regulators to come down on phone companies that sell subscriber information to third parties, including the CIA. — The groups are petitioning the Federal Communications Commission in response to reports …
Discussion:
Public Knowledge, CNET, Policy Blog and Free Press Blog
Tyler Hayes / Co.Labs:
The Revolutionary New Music Apps You Missed In 2013 — A lot of new music services continue to pop up each year, despite most consumer's unwillingness to financially support artists directly. This is why most music services practice the balancing act of end user visibility and technical improvements …
Discussion:
hypebot
Houston Chronicle:
Chronicle names managing editor — Award-winning editor Vernon Loeb, who most recently worked as metro editor of the Washington Post, has been named managing editor of the Houston Chronicle. The announcement was made Wednesday by Hearst Newspapers President Mark Aldam and Nancy Barnes …
Discussion:
JIMROMENESKO.COM
Justin Ellis / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The U.K.'s Ampp3d thinks it knows why you want to click on charts, images, and memes — Data-driven storytelling and web-native, sharable journalism are two of the biggest trends in media at the moment. If you locked the two together in a room, Ampp3d might be what would walk out the door.
Discussion:
Martin Belam and @niemanlab
Josh Horwitz / Tech in Asia:
Marcus Brauchli, once of WSJ and Washington Post, invests in Taipei startup The News Lens — The News Lens, the startup that wants to disrupt traditional media in Asia, just received its first round of funding — The News Lens, the Taipei-based startup that's gaining a loyal following …
Discussion:
@salaja and @gabbystern
Cynthia Littleton / Variety:
Nickelodeon, Sesame Workshop Alum Tom Ascheim Named President of ABC Family — Exec worked with Disney-ABC TV Group chief Anne Sweeney early in his career — Former Nickelodeon and Sesame Workshop exec Tom Ascheim has been tapped as president of ABC Family.
Discussion:
The Wrap
Angela Haggerty / The Drum:
YouTube 2013 ad revenues estimated to jump more than 50% to $5.6bn — YouTube's projected advertising revenue for this year will have jumped by more than 50 per cent to $5.6bn, according to a report. — The report from media research firm eMarketer projects that YouTube's net revenues once partners …
Peter Kafka / AllThingsD:
Web Video Startup Ooyala Raises $43 Million — We saw a smattering of ad tech IPOs this year, and there are a bunch of companies that are supposedly lined up for next year. — Here's one you likely won't see going public in 2014 — at least not in the beginning of the year: Ooyala, the Web video startup.
Discussion:
VentureBeat, AdExchanger, TechCrunch, The Wrap, Mashable and Variety