Top News:
Abby Ohlheiser / Washington Post:
International Olympics Committee rules ban the posting of Olympics GIFs, Vines, and other short videos for everyone but broadcast rights holders, NBC in the US — If there's a viral moment at this year's games in Rio, the International Olympic Committee wants to make sure it comes only from authorized social media sources.
Discussion:
Boing Boing, TechCrunch, International Olympic …, New York Magazine, The Verge, Engadget, Awful Announcing, Reuters, Guardian, Ars Technica UK, Quartz, @andreasdotorg, The Drum, Fast Company, @mremilyheller, The Next Web, @dmjreports, Business Insider, @xeni, @kylebrussell, @pmarca, @dangillmor, @aral, @rowankaiser, @rungomez, The Next Web and The Drum
RELATED:
Peter Kafka / Recode:
The Washington Post is using AI software to produce data-centric news bits about the Olympics so its reporters can work on more complex stories — Woodward, Bernstein ... and Optimus Prime? — The Washington Post has a big team of journalists covering the Rio Olympics.
Discussion:
Washington Post, @wapoengineering, @joshsternberg and FishbowlDC
Jason Lynch / Adweek:
NBCUniversal says national ad sales for Rio Olympics already reached $1.2B, 20%+ ahead of 2012 London Olympics — No matter what the final medal count looks like at the 2016 Summer Olympics, NBCUniversal is going to be Rio's big winner. — One day before the games even begin …
Dylan Byers / CNNMoney:
In bid to personalize coverage, NYT launches two-way text-messaging service from the Rio Olympics to give subscribers a behind-the-scenes look at the games — The New York Times has embarked on a new form of storytelling to enhance its coverage of the Summer Olympics: Two-way text-messaging.
Discussion:
Nieman Lab, @niemanlab, @shreeyasinha, @cnntech, @moneyries, @lauraelizdavis, @actwireless, @nytimescomm and @cnnmoney
Jim Rutenberg / New York Times:
CEO Brian Roberts says Comcast and NBC will use Olympics to demo TV's future, with content on 11 channels and up to 41 live streams, easily navigable on X1 — Five years ago, the Comcast chief executive Brian Roberts faced his first challenge as the new majority owner of NBC.
New York Times:
Facebook changes News Feed to automatically detect “clickbait” headlines, rank stories lower if they “withhold or distort information” — Facebook says it plans to marginalize what it considers to be “clickbait” news stories from publishers in its news feed …
Discussion:
The Atlantic, VentureBeat, Bloomberg, Slate, Facebook, ClickZ, Techcircle.in, TelecomTV, Business Reporter, the Econsultancy blog, FishbowlNY, Gizmodo, The Tech Portal, The Mary Sue, @mikeisaac, @brianstelter, The Mary Sue, New York Magazine, The Huffington Post, Guardian, GeekWire, Ars Technica UK, @sarahcuda, Consumerist, Mediaite, Variety, The Wrap, SocialTimes, Computerworld, Forbes, Recode, @nathanjurgenson, Ad Age, VentureBeat, @jwherrman, @gaberivera, @mikeisaac, @baekdal, @mikeisaac, @nytimesbusiness, @fmanjoo, Techvibes, TIME, @alexia, Daring Fireball, TechCrunch, Hollywood Reporter, Fast Company, Fortune, Wall Street Journal, CNET, @ronlieber, Bloomberg, Marketing Land, Engadget, USA Today, @alexjamesfitz, Business Insider, @mathieuvonrohr, @matthewknell, The Next Web, @petersterne, The Verge and @melbournecoal
Mathew Ingram / Fortune:
The Information's Jessica Lessin on scaling subscription-based media companies, publisher over-reliance on distribution platforms like Facebook and Google, more — As the media landscape continues to shift and buckle under the stress of digital disruption, the marketplace has started to look like a little like a barbell.
Discussion:
Politico, @mathewi, @jessicalessin, @rafat, @marlizevr, @mathewi and @sarahcuda
Politico:
Paul Beckett, Asia editor of the Wall Street Journal, to take over as paper's D.C. bureau chief — Paul Beckett, the Asia editor of the Wall Street Journal, is expected to take over as the chief of the paper's D.C. bureau, according to several sources with knowledge of the move.
Discussion:
@alansmurray, @hadas_gold, Talking Biz News and FishbowlDC
Edmund Lee / Recode:
Sources: a potential Viacom board shakeup could change its approach to the internet, with BuzzFeed a potential acquisition target — It's the only major media company that hasn't made a big digital acquisition. — Viacom owns MTV, VH1 and Comedy Central, which means that at one time it …
Discussion:
Media Wire Daily, @jyarow, @itsdavidford, @thestalwart, @mikeisaac, @maxmgardner, @gerryfsmith, @iamanshul, @alexweprin, @kenli729 and @petersterne
RELATED:
Wall Street Journal:
Viacom reports Q3 profit of $432M, down from $591M a year earlier, on revenue of $3.12B, with weak cable results; Dauman says legal battles are slowing deals
Viacom reports Q3 profit of $432M, down from $591M a year earlier, on revenue of $3.12B, with weak cable results; Dauman says legal battles are slowing deals
Discussion:
Los Angeles Times, Media Wire Daily, Associated Press, The Wrap, files.shareholder.com, Reuters, USA Today and Broadcasting & Cable
New York Times:
How Snapchat grew its ad business by persuading companies to try untested and experimental ad formats — SAN FRANCISCO — When Snapchat's chief executive, Evan Spiegel, took the stage in June 2015 at a marketing conference in Cannes, France, to champion advertising on the ephemeral messaging service, advertisers were wary.
Discussion:
@ktbenner, @nytimes, @nytimesbits and @nytimesbusiness
Peter Kafka / Recode:
Sources: Apple is talking to TV firms about building a TV guide for Apple TV and iOS, letting viewers browse available in-app content, play shows with one click — Tim Cook doesn't want to sell you TV anymore. He wants to tell you what's on TV. — Last year, Apple shelved its plan to sell you TV.
Rick Edmonds / Poynter:
Dallas Morning News' early investment in digital marketing is paying off, covering print losses in Q2 and keeping revenues level YoY — Jim Moroney was a John the Baptist of the newspaper industry five years ago when he suggested that the then-tiny “other” revenue category could grow to cover print losses.
Michael Calderone / The Huffington Post:
Hillary Clinton takes questions at NABJ/NAHJ conference, but reporters push back on the idea it's an accessible “press conference” — “I am not sure what else you could call it,” says Clinton press secretary Brian Fallon. — Hillary Clinton fielded questions Friday …
Discussion:
The Slot, @daveweigel, @danmericacnn, Mediaite, The Hill, Politico, @briciosegovia, @zeninjor, @mlcalderone, @scottwongdc, @hannahallam, @chuckrossdc, @repckelly and Poynter