Top News:
Peter Kafka / Re/code:
Cord cutters use 7x more bandwidth than cable TV watchers - Sandvine — Here's a question that may be increasingly relevant for some of you: If you don't pay for cable, and you get all your video from the Internet instead, how much bandwidth do you eat up each month? — Quite a bit, it turns out.
Discussion:
Gigaom
RELATED:
Todd Spangler / Variety:
Netflix Remains King of Bandwidth Usage, While YouTube Declines — Videogame-streaming service Twitch gains share of downstream traffic, breaking into top 15 applications by usage, according to study — Netflix, already the biggest single driver of Internet bandwidth …
Discussion:
ABC News, Wall Street Journal, The Huffington Post and ctvnews.ca
Joshua Benton / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The New York Times has a (lovely) new cooking site … Spring is apparently new-product-launch season at the Times: Barely a month past the debut of NYT Now, along comes its new cooking site. (In various reports over the past year, it's been referred to as a food product, a dining product …
Keith J. Kelly / New York Post:
Time Inc. execs line up at spinoff trough — As Time Inc. insiders brace for a new round of pre-spinoff layoffs that are expected to begin next week, recently unveiled numbers show the top brass at the publisher are not sharing in the pain. — Norman Pearlstine, the executive vice president …
Discussion:
MediaWire Daily
Howard Finberg / Poynter:
Why newsrooms don't embrace digital tools — Many newsrooms in the U.S. are still not taking advantage of the low-cost digital tools for gathering and distributing journalism, even when journalists and producers know about the alternatives to traditional technologies.
Dan Appenfeller / American Journalism Review:
Copy Editors Carve Niche in Digital Media Landscape — Abraham Hyatt saw the writing on the wall. — More than a year into his three-year managing editor stint at ReadWrite, a popular technology news site, Hyatt watched traffic plummet from roughly 5 million pageviews a month to less than 3 million.
Discussion:
@kimbui, @dcseifert, @tcarmody, @tcarmody, @mrbutterworth, @rachaelbl, @kleinmatic, @pinkgrammar, @emmabgardner, @gerrrib, @kubremner, @jaredbkeller and JIMROMENESKO.COM
Guardian:
Le Monde editor quits after power struggle with top staff — Natalie Nougayrede says she is stepping down from role at French newspaper after ‘personal and direct attacks’ — Natalie Nougayrede, the first female editor-in-chief of the prestigious French daily Le Monde …
Discussion:
english.rfi.fr
Amy Schatz / Re/code:
Letter from major ISPs urges FCC not to reclassify broadband as a utility — Internet Providers Strike Back on Net Neutrality — In a surprise to no one, Internet providers warned federal regulators that treating broadband like phone lines will stunt future investments and service upgrades.
Discussion:
Gigaom, Wall Street Journal, TechCrunch, @waltmossberg and Daily Dot
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Brian Fung / Washington Post:
FCC Twitter chat on net neutrality proves useful; draft to ask whether fast lanes should be banned, public comment period extended to 60 days
FCC Twitter chat on net neutrality proves useful; draft to ask whether fast lanes should be banned, public comment period extended to 60 days
Discussion:
BBC, @amy_schatz and @vanschewick
Dominic Rushe / Guardian:
FCC considers treating cable firms like utilities in net neutrality debate
FCC considers treating cable firms like utilities in net neutrality debate
Discussion:
Quartz, Broadcasting & Cable, Washington Post, @fcc, @gigibsohnfcc, @b_fung, @sensanders, Reuters, SPIN, The Verge and Associated Press
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
London Live TV company ESTV lost more than £1m in 13 months — New figures reveal Evening Standard owner Alexander Lebedev and his son Evgeny invested £2m to help set up service — The company behind the London Live TV channel has reported a loss of more than £1m …
Discussion:
Press Gazette
Alexis Sobel Fitts / Columbia Journalism Review:
The ‘new feminists’ of Joanna Cole's Cosmopolitan — When Cosmopolitan took home a National Magazine Award for public service journalism—the first ASME recognition in the magazine's almost 50-year history—the news echoed through headlines as signal of the state of things …
Discussion:
The New York Observer
B&T:
Newspaper mastheads up even though print readership down — Many of Australia's major newspapers have upped their masthead audiences, even though fewer people are reading the print editions. — Seven out of the ten main capital city daily newspapers increased their masthead audiences …
Ben Fox Rubin / Wall Street Journal:
Gannett to buy six Texas TV stations for $215 million. — Gannett agreed to buy six TV stations in Texas from Dallas-based media firm London Broadcasting for $215 million, continuing Gannett's effort to push more into broadcast.
Discussion:
Broadcasting & Cable, Poynter, USA Today, Wall Street Journal and PR Newswire
Emma Hall / AdAge:
WPP leads acquisitions race with 6 tech firms and 10 marketing/communications companies bought in Q1 2014 — WPP Leads Acquisition Trail Again to Start the Year — Sorrell's Group Buys More Tech Companies — Festival — Internet Week New York — WPP, the largest agency holding company …
Discussion:
MediaWire Daily
Frances Robinson / Wall Street Journal:
Google Faces Challenges in Europe After Privacy Ruling — Surprise Decision Will Have Implications for Privacy Throughout Europe — BRUSSELS—Individuals can ask Google Inc. to remove links to news articles, court judgments and other documents in search results for their name, the European Union's highest court said Tuesday.
Discussion:
New York Times, @lawlibnc, @dangillmor, Digital Trends, SlashGear, Poynter, bizjournals, Agence France-Presse and Reuters
Nic Christensen / mUmBRELLA:
Mail Online soft launches Australian content as Nielsen rankings remain stable — The Mail Online has switched its website to largely Australian content, in what appears to be a full launch for one of the newest entrants in the Australian online news space.
Discussion:
Daily Mail, @jarrodwhittaker, @penelopejones and @onlyapaprmoon
Reporters Without Borders:
Special court begins hearing contempt charges against two journalists — The Special Tribunal for Lebanon, which is based in The Hague, today began hearing “contempt of court” and “obstruction of justice” charges against two Lebanese journalists, Karma Khayat, the deputy news director of Al-Jadeed TV …
Discussion:
New York Times