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Britain’s Daily Mail Web Site Makes Foray Into America

The Daily Mail

Mail Online, The Daily Mail’s site, has expanded on the news and business sides with offices in New York, and coverage of celebrities in Los Angeles.

 

Washington Post to Charge Online

Washington Post - WC

The Washington Post confirmed its intention to start charging for access to its website, making it one of the last major American newspapers to do so.

 

'The Daily' doomed by dull content and isolation

It was too expensive. It lacked editorial focus. And for a digital publication, it was strangely cut off from the Internet. That's the obituary being written in real time through posts, tweets and online chats about The Daily, the first-of-its-kind iPad newspaper that is being shut down this month.

 

Automated Bidding Systems Test Old Ways of Selling Ads

Targeted Advertising

Technologies that target ads to specific consumers, rather than aggregate audiences offered by publishers, are punishing newspaper, broadcast and magazine sites.

 

Chicago Tribune staff demands answers from editor over Journatic

Continuing questions about Journatic’s ethics and business practices came into sharp focus earlier this month with the discovery that it had supplied a story to the Chicago Tribune’s TribLocal edition that contained allegedly plagiarized and fabricated elements. The concerns first emerged when National Public Radio’s “This American Life” broadcast a story showing how Journatic used cut-rate staff in the Philippines to write stories using fake, American-sounding names.

 

The New York Times Co. Posts a Loss

The New York Times Company reported a second-quarter loss on Thursday because of a write-down in the value of About.com and continuing declines in print and digital advertising revenue.

Senh: They gave lots of numbers, but no specific number on how much they make from digital subscriptions. Sure, they said the number of subscribers went up, but how much are they making from it.

 

Is a paywall coming to The Washington Post?

Will you soon have to start paying to use The Post’s Web site? No, not in the short term, and maybe never, if I read the tea leaves correctly.

Senh: Good. I hope not. I'm not sure if it's working for the New York Times. Until it's proven that it works, I think papers should stay put. The Los Angeles Times recently enacted a paywall, similarly to the New York Times. All I know is it hasn't done Variety any good. Since they enacted their paywall, their competitors - mainly Hollywood Reporter - have usurped them in internet traffic.

 

Rupert Murdoch joins Twitter

A phone hacking scandal may have cost Rupert Murdoch his biggest-selling newspaper in 2011, but the billionaire media mogul managed to end the year with a modest addition to his empire -- an account on Twitter.

Senh: Rupert Murdoch has a Twitter account! I wonder if he has a MySpace account. I also wonder if this means anything else - i.e. that he's actually interested in the microblogging site.

 

Ooops! New York Times Accidentally Emails Millions

New York Times Subscription Error

Did The New York Times just cancel home delivery of its newspaper to everyone, across the nation? An email apparently sent out to the entire user database appeared to suggest that. In fact, the Times even sent the email to people that don't subscribe to the paper -- a total of 8.6 million readers, rather than the 300 it intended to message, the company said.

Senh: Wrong button, intern.

 

Denver Post Dumps Righthaven, Bogus Lawsuit Company Just About Dead and Gone

Denver Post Dumps Righthaven, Bogus Lawsuit Company Just About Dead and Gone

Righthaven's dream of corporate enrichment via frivolous lawsuits is in tatters, and the company's erstwhile partners are abandoning ship. The new CEO of MediaNews Group, John Paton, announced this week that its partnership with Righthaven would expire at the end of the month and that the company has no plans to renew it.

Senh: Good riddance.

 

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