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Atlantic Media employees received word earlier today that “unauthorized individuals” have obtained access to NationalJournal.com.
Tumblr Inc., the six-year-old blog network that months ago began letting advertisers pay for prominent placement, expects to make its first annual profit this year after extending the feature to smartphones.
Lots of debate, little action.
The Washington Post today introduces “BrandConnect,” which allows marketers to offer content to Washington Post users and feature it on The Post’s homepage and throughout the site. CTIA-The Wireless Association is the first advertiser to take advantage of this new marketing solution.
In 2013, few things will matter more to media outlets than growing their digital reader bases. But there’s hardly a clear-cut answer how they should forge ahead to fulfill that goal.
OJR opens a new chapter today with a fresh look and even more of the content you’ve come to trust.
Third-Party Ad Companies and Small Sites Will Be Impacted.
Security experts predict attacks will get worse before they get better.
Caffeine-addicted New York Times fans are in luck — the paper is offering 15 free articles a day to those who surf its website while sitting in a Starbucks.
Tablet video viewing grew 110 percent in 2012 – but mobile video hours
still just account for little more than eight percent of all time spent
viewing online video, according to Ooyala.
Sitting in his office last week, Brian McGrory, the new editor of The Boston Globe, described the relationship between the two websites — similarly named, often confused, one free, one paid — that his newspaper offers.
Google has reiterated a warning to publishers that its ban on links that
are designed to enhance a site’s PageRank applies not just to paid
links but to sponsored content and advertorial as well.
Newsosaur: How Publishers Can Win at Mobile Commerce



