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10:00 PM ET, September 27, 2014

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Andrew Beaujon / Poynter:
What's changed at the NYT since the leaked innovation report, according to NYT staffers at ONA conference session  —  How the NYT innovation report came to be  —  Amy O'Leary's first thought when she heard The New York Times' innovation report had been leaked was “S**t, I'm going to get fired.”
Brian Knowlton / New York Times:
US State Department fights ISIS social media propaganda with accounts like @ThinkAgain_DOS  —  Digital War Takes Shape on Websites Over ISIS  —  WASHINGTON — Along with its surprising military success, the Islamic State group has demonstrated a skill and sophistication with social media previously unseen in extremist groups.
Discussion: Bloomberg, VICE News, ABC News and Telegraph
Ryan Devereaux / The Intercept:
Managing a Nightmare: How the CIA Watched Over the Destruction of Gary Webb  —  Eighteen years after it was published, “Dark Alliance,” the San Jose Mercury News's bombshell investigation into links between the cocaine trade, Nicaragua's Contra rebels, and African American neighborhoods in California …
Timothy B. Lee / Vox:
How experiments with online services in '80s led newspapers to believe the web wasn't a serious threat in the '90s  —  Newspapers weren't late to online news — they were way too early  —  When a new technology is invented, there's often a lot of doubt about its utility.
Discussion: @mattyglesias and @ruthoutspoken
Rebecca Greenfield / Fast Company:
The (Surprisingly Profitable) Rise Of Podcast Networks  —  In the third episode of StartUp, the podcast about starting a podcast business, host and aspiring entrepreneur Alex Blumberg has a breakdown.  —  “I spent three f**king thousand dollars today,” he complains to his wife.  “As I'm about to quit my job!
Discussion: Washington Post, Thanks:@jakeshapiro
John Ourand / SportsBusiness Daily:
An Inside Look At ESPN's Decision To Suspend Bill Simmons For Goodell Comments … It was around 5:00pm ET Wednesday afternoon when Marie Donoghue, one of ESPN's highest-ranking female execs, picked up the phone in the network's Manhattan office to call Bill Simmons.
Alexis Sobel Fitts / Columbia Journalism Review:
How Facebook is changing who gets paid for your work  —  Content curators and aggregators aren't going away  —  In 2009, Wired's then-executive editor, Chris Anderson, released a book with a daunting prediction.  In Free: The Future of A Radical Price, Anderson claimed that the open-air marketplace …
Anne Helen Petersen / BuzzFeed:
Here's Why The New York Times Television Coverage Is So Bad  —  How did the New York Times, the national paper of record, and the recipient of 114 Pulitzer Prizes, find itself with the worst television criticism section of any mainstream, popular publication?
Craig Silverman / Tow Center for Digital Journalism:
News in the Grey: Rumors and Debunkings in Online Media  —  Our new fellow, Craig Silverman, launched his research project at the Online News Association conference in Chicago this week.  The timing was perfect: It's been a big week for rumors and debunkings.  —  On Monday this week there were rumors that:
Discussion: @emilybell and The Atlantic Online
Rafat Ali / rafat.org:
This Vertical Life: The Media Models I Admire  —  Verticals have a particular attraction for me, which may have something to do with my general obsessiveness.  Picking a topic you're willing to spend a good number of years in, going deep into it with everything you have …
Janko Roettgers / Gigaom:
As Roku grows, it's moving towards pay-to-play for successful channels  —  Getting your app onto Roku's platform is free.  But once you start to make real money, the company will ask you to sign a new deal — to the surprise of some publishers.  —  With 1,800 channels and growing …
Discussion: FierceCable
Karl Bode / DSLreports:
Comcast's Netflix competitor Streampix no longer stand-alone offering, now part of Xfinity TV  —  Comcast: Nobody Really Liked Our Netflix Wannabe Streampix  —  In February of 2012 Comcast unveiled Streampix, their effort at trying to prevent cord cutting by offering a Netflix-esque service of their own.
 
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 More News: 
Laurie Oakes / HeraldSun:
Proposed Australian anti-terror law could send journalists to jail for doing their jobs
Discussion: CNET and Guardian
Charlie Osborne / ZDNet:
Amazon's deal to acquire Twitch for $970M is now complete
Discussion: gameinformer.com and VentureBeat
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:
Syrian Activists Report From ISIS-Controlled City News Outlets Can't Reach
 Earlier Picks: 
Emil Protalinski / The Next Web:
Thom Yorke releases album via BitTorrent Bundle with free single and video, $6 album
Mathew Ingram / Gigaom:
One secret to the success of Quartz, BuzzFeed and Gawker: They look at news as a service
Discussion: Poynter
 

 
From Techmeme:

Kif Leswing / CNBC:
Nvidia announces Blackwell, a new generation of AI chips available later in 2024, starting with the GB200 superchip, which pairs two B200 GPUs with a Grace CPU

Sean Michael Kerner / VentureBeat:
Stability AI debuts Stable Video 3D, a generative AI tool built on its Stable Video Diffusion model, letting users create 3D video from a text or image prompt

Samuel Tolbert / Windows Central:
Valve debuts Steam Families in beta, allowing a group of up to six Steam users to share their games, manage parental controls, and more

 
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