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8:50 AM ET, February 17, 2014

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
David Carr / New York Times:
Stealthily, Comcast Fortifies Its Arsenal  —  Big media companies are generally warships, blistering with firepower and declaring their might long before they attack.  But Comcast, which is headed toward being one of the biggest of them all, is much more like a submarine …
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David Gelles / DealBook:
A Bigger Comcast May Beget More Deals  —  Just last month, Discovery Communications, the owner of cable networks including Animal Planet and TLC, had considered acquiring rival Scripps Networks Interactive in a deal that would have been valued at more than $10 billion.  —  Discovery never went ahead.
Roy Greenslade / Guardian:
Conservative columnist James Delingpole to lead Breitbart.com's London team  —  James Delingpole and Raheem Kassam head Breitbart's new London team  —  Breitbart.com, the right-wing news and opinion website, is taking off in Britain.  The most high-profile recruit is James Delingpole …
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Leslie Kaufman / New York Times:
Breitbart News Network plans global expansion with Texas and London operations  —  Breitbart News Network Plans Global Expansion  —  It has been nearly two years since the conservative provocateur Andrew Breitbart died, but the online news organization that carries his name is not only continuing …
Nicole Perlroth / New York Times:
Profile of blogger Brian Krebs who was first to uncover security breaches at Adobe and Target  —  Reporting From the Web's Underbelly  —  SAN FRANCISCO — In the last year, Eastern European cybercriminals have stolen Brian Krebs's identity a half dozen times, brought down his website …
Discussion: @infoarbitrage and @virusbtn
New York Times:
Punching Above Its Weight, Upstart Netflix Pokes at HBO  —  On the night of the Golden Globes ceremony last month, Netflix and HBO held dueling parties at the Beverly Hilton hotel.  Bono and Julia Roberts mingled underneath a bejeweled tent as Netflix, the upstart streaming service …
Discussion: @pkafka, @brucedaisley and @carr2n
Adrianne Jeffries / The Verge:
People don't always read the articles they share  —  You're not going to read this  —  But you'll probably share it anyway  —  Earlier this month, there was yet another lengthy public debate about Upworthy, the two-year-old publisher that has become one of the most popular sites …
James Trew / Engadget:
GoPro's IPO isn't about selling cameras, it's about creating a media empire  —  It was 2001, more than a decade before GoPro would announce its intentions to go public, and its CEO Nick Woodman was facing a very expensive failure.  In just two years, he'd lost nearly $4 million of investors' money …
Ashley Armstrong / Telegraph:
Reader's Digest sold for £1 by Better Capital  —  The sale for a nominal amount marks another chapter in the magazine publishing company's chequered history and a steep writedown for Jon Moulton's listed private equity firm  —  Reader's Digest has been sold for just £1 …
Darren Boyle / Press Gazette:
NUJ day of action called over Egyptian trial of Al-Jazeera journalists  —  The National Union of Journalists is planning a day of action in advance of the terrorism trials of four journalists in Egypt.  —  NUJ members will meet outside the Egyptian Embassy on Wednesday to call …
Ben Butler / Sydney Morning Herald:
Rupert Murdoch tax win blows $880m hole in federal budget  —  Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation has blown an $880 million hole in the federal budget after winning a long-running battle with the Australian Tax Office over deductions.  —  The ATO had refused to allow the deduction …
Discussion: AFR Mobile and Guardian
Martin Pengelly / Guardian:
Journalists who broke NSA story in Guardian receive George Polk Awards  —  The three journalists who broke the National Security Agency revelations from Edward Snowden in the Guardian are among the recipients of the prestigious 2013 George Polk Awards in Journalism.
Elizabeth Jensen / New York Times:
WNET to Return $3.5 Million Grant for Pension Series  —  WNET, the New York City public television broadcaster, said Friday that it will return a $3.5 million grant it received to sponsor an ambitious project on public pensions amid charges that it solicited inappropriate underwriting for the series.
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 More News: 
Amar Toor / The Verge:
Obstructed view: how Russia distorts the Olympics
Discussion: TIME
Sam Kirkland / Poynter:
Facebook vs. Google, social media vs. SEO: Why BuzzFeed data shouldn't declare a winner
Discussion: The Daily Caller
Caroline O'Donovan / Nieman Journalism Lab:
How a crime becomes political: Trayvon Martin and the way different media co-create the news
Arik Hesseldahl / Re/code:
Syrian Electronic Army Attacks Forbes Website, Steals User Info
Tina Amirtha / Co.Labs:
How The Founder Of WeTransfer Went From Blog To Startup
 Earlier Picks: 
Natalie Jarvey / Hollywood Reporter:
Why TV Networks Are Interested in Adapting Online Series Again
Wall Street Journal:
Venezuela Media Largely Ignored Protests
Discussion: Associated Press and The Stream
Johana Bhuiyan / Capital New York:
With launch team in place, FiveThirtyEight shapes up
Discussion: FiveThirtyEight
Angela Mills Wade / EurActiv:
Current ‘Libor’ regulation is a threat to financial journalism