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Over the past year, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) has held a series of meetings to discuss best practices for privacy, accountability and transparency in the use of Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) by commercial and private users. During the process, a coalition of news media organizations, including NAA, have stressed that any best practices must not encroach on their First Amendment rights to report news and should also not interfere with their ability to photograph public spaces.
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David Stone is the Senior Search Engine Marketing (SEM) Manager at the Austin American-Statesman and SEO Lead for Cox Media Group- Newspapers. He spends his time leading SEO tactics, training and technology as well as running the in-house SEM campaigns. David works in the Audience department and loves working with the newsroom when breaking news happens. He was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and raised in Austin, Texas, with an affinity for Centex BBQ and Big Nature.
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David Chavern joined NAA nearly eight months ago because he believed deeply in the power of news journalism and the successful future ahead for this industry. After a few months on the job and the opportunity to meet personally with many of the members, he is even more convinced that we have reason to be optimistic in the face of industry-wide change.
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The Newspaper Association of America (NAA) filed a Complaint and Request for Investigation with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) alleging that certain ad blocking technologies and related services violate Section 5 of the FTC Act as unfair and deceptive trade practices. NAA requests that the FTC investigate ad blockers that offer "paid whitelisting," substitute ad blockers' own advertising for blocked ads, claim that subscription services prevent publisher harm, and facilitate the evasion of metered subscription systems.
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Even after eight years, David Benoit still feels a rush when he sees his name on the front page of The Wall Street Journal. He has always been a fan of newspapers. His mother says he learned to read from The Boston Globe sports page. Even in the digital age, Benoit says there is something about the physical paper that can't be replicated online. Benoit is The Wall Street Journal's activism reporter. He was recently honored as one of NAA's Top 30 Under 30 award recipients.
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NTVB Media is the leading publisher of TV entertainment and listings magazines — including TV Guide — serving 20,000,000 readers daily. Click here for details about our FREE entertainment content partnership, which includes movie reviews, TV Best Bets, celebrity features, retro articles from ReMIND magazine, our TV NUTT widget and more!
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Laura Reiley has been the Tampa Bay Times' food critic since 2007. She has received numerous state and national awards. She is a former critic for the San Francisco Chronicle and the Baltimore Sun and the author of four guidebooks in the Moon Handbook series. She has cooked professionally and is a graduate of the California Culinary Academy.
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Media ownership rules were adopted in 1975 to prevent cross ownership of radio, broadcast and newspaper in the same market as a way to promote localism, diversity and competition. The ban was created in an environment where there were limited ways to communicate with the public, leading to concern over a dominating voice for news and views. Clearly, newspapers are no longer the only source of information. Are you reading this on paper?
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NAA has been working for months alongside a broad coalition that includes small businesses, nonprofits and universities to moderate the Department of Labor's (DOL) proposed rule to increase the salaries test used to determine whether an employee qualifies for overtime. The DOL's original proposal would have increased the threshold of $23,660 to $50,440 annually — a 113 percent increase — without accounting for regional differences in cost of living. On May 18, the DOL released its Final Rule with only modest changes. While we are still evaluating the Final Rule, here is what you need to know.
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USA Today
When I talked to Warren Buffett three years ago, he confided that he had a forbidden passion.
"It's almost unnatural how much I love newspapers," he said.
And he was acting on that love. Four years after saying that he wouldn't buy newspapers "at any price," the financial guru had started snapping them up.
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The Atlantic
A report from mascot boot camp. Michael Phelps's diet. Why trees droop at night. Clinton-Trump poll results.
Those are just some of the stories The Washington Post published last week. Every day, the national paper produces an astonishing number of words about an astonishing number of topics. But just how many stories?
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Billy Penn
Josh Kopelman runs First Round Capital. The venture capitalist has founded companies, and invested in many more (including Uber, which you've probably used, and LinkedIn, which you probably can't avoid).
Now he's the chairman of the board of the Philadelphia Media Network, taking the reins from former owner H.F. "Gerry" Lenfest for the company that oversees the Philadelphia Inquirer, Daily News, Philly.com and the new nonprofit Institute for Journalism in New Media.
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We are a leading provider of print, online, and mobile advertising solutions, partnering with media companies from coast to coast in markets of various size.
Our company has dramatically increased advertising revenue for its clients while bridging the gap between print and digital advertising.
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Nieman Lab
The Swiss media group Tamedia publishes more than 20 different titles — from daily broadsheet newspapers to a women's magazine that comes out every three weeks.
Though these publications have widely disparate audiences, Tamedia is now trying to bring that readership together with 12-App, a paid German-language app that collects and repackages 12 stories from across the company's publications.
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Digiday
Ad tech ate the world, but Facebook is eating ad tech, at least from the perspective of the industry that was born before the social network began dominating internet advertising.
Last week alone, Facebook shut down its last pure programmatic ad exchange FBX, put the final nail in the LiveRail platform, and expanded its Facebook Audience Network, which is a closed platform.
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Advertising Age
Instagram wants to give its users an incentive to create more content for the photo and video-sharing site.
To do that, it's considering sharing revenue generated from news, sports, celebrities and other content, said Carolyn Everson, vice president for global marketing solutions at Instagram's parent, Facebook.
"Content is incredibly important on Facebook and Instagram," Everson said.
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Poynter
Under the ownership of Jeff Bezos, The Washington Post has become a fount of editorial innovation. There's Arc, The Post's home-cooked content management system that's now being sold to other news organizations. The Post was the first major daily newspaper to adopt HTTPS, a move that is gaining adherents throughout the news industry. And it's built an engineering corps 200 staffers strong.
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Tech Crunch
News delivery startup Blendle, which is applying a marketplace model to journalism offering pay-per-article reads from a range of different publishers, has launched iOS and Android apps in the U.S., expanding how U.S. users get to consume their chosen content.
While it started with a website, it already had apps in Europe but says the U.S. app is a redesign of those earlier apps.
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Media Shift
There are billions of people who use email and read news online, but most of these people do not use any tool to filter the news and find relevant content. These people do not use RSS, Twitter, Nuzzel, Flipboard, or other social news apps — but they do use email.
Contrary to what some people think, email is not dead. In fact, email newsletters are hotter than ever right now.
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Politico Media
Jordan Hoffner, who last week was named CEO of Salon Media Group, already has big plans to turn the company's business around.
In meetings and conversations with Salon staffers last week, Hoffner, a media veteran and venture capitalist, has made it clear that he wants to raise Salon's stock price and build out a larger business through acquisitions.
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Reuters
Messaging app Snapchat has raised $1.81 billion in funding, the company reported in a U.S. regulatory filing, a sign that investor interest is strong despite concerns among some venture capitalists that the platform is struggling to attract advertisers.
Venture capital database PitchBook estimated the company's valuation after the financing at $17.81 billion, up from $16 billion at it most recent financing in February.
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Digiday
Platforms require publishers to master new skills. One of the newest: building a Snapchat content team from scratch — and quickly.
Men's lifestyle publisher Thrillist is one of those publishers, and it is building a six-person Snapchat crew to produce the types of videos of events, festivals and city guides it's known for online.
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