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Jan. 12, 2011, 3 p.m.
Popular on Twitter: The Globe’s hiring, social media and subpoenas, how Rosen tweets
Six ways journos can use Quora
AP and Fairey settle the Obama poster case
A social media loophole that could put sources at risk
“It’s about the work I do”: How Jay Rosen tweets
Spacewar!
Palin video: Sad about “irresponsible statements”
Who actually owns your data?
NYT media desk documentary preview
The Boston Globe’s hiring for tons of digital positions
San Antonio has a new $5.99/month news site
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Caroline O'Donovan
April 30, 2013
Everyone’s a critic: Hacktivists, online organizing, and the dark magic of down voting at MIT
MIT’s Comparative Media Studies graduate theses critique how hacking is portrayed in the media, whether new media demands new criticism, and how a YouTube policy influenced the writing of comedy and drama.
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“Blood libel”: How language evolves and spreads within online worlds
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Links on Twitter: Time-shifted reading, AP and Fairey make nice, two words Microsoft doesn’t want Apple to own
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The latest from Nieman Lab ➚
A community news co-op, aiming to build a replicable model, moves a step closer to reality
The New York Times launched a revamped mobile site today
Two design trends: Make all your mobile products look alike (app or web) and make it clean, clean, clean.
Every page is your homepage: Reuters, untied to print metaphor, builds a modern river of news
Article pages now have added depth and context, providing more opportunities for readers coming from social media to discover more content.
Tuesday Q&A: Newsana’s Ben Peterson on story discovery, how readers become experts, and celebrating high-quality news
It’s yet another startup in the news filtering space, trying to get the attention of a user base.
Everyone’s a critic: Hacktivists, online organizing, and the dark magic of down voting at MIT
Public opinion polls do not always report public opinion
Sociologist Herbert Gans says the news media should do a better job noting that “polls are answers to questions rather than opinions,” and that not all opinions have the same intensity — or the same impact.
This Week in Review: Verification and the crowd in Boston, and the Kochs’ newspaper plans
What’s New in Digital Scholarship: Why journalists link (or why they don’t) and the libel potential of a retweet
The arguments for smarter public support of journalism, the rise of civic engagement in social media, and the changing practices of foreign correspondents: all that and more in this month’s roundup of the academic literature.
The newsonomics of the Koch Brothers and the sales of U.S.’ top metros
Will some of America’s top newspapers find themselves bought by owners motivated by political ideology more than civic duty?
Wrong narratives may outweigh wrong facts, but reporting with respect means getting both right
A discussion on reporting in traumatic situations — “Sandy Hook and Beyond” — highlights the gaps in perception between those being covered and those doing the covering.