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who employs me
I am a staff writer with CTV.ca News. That operation is part of CTV News, which is of course nestled into CTV Inc. and CTVglobemedia.

I don't speak for my employer on this blog. I don't comment about the internal affairs of my employer.

Any views expressed here are my own.
Main Page  »  Media
View Article  Facebook apologizes for Beacon, but ...

Social media It Boy Mark Zuckerberg posted a mea culpa on Facebook about the Beacon program that would track your online purchases and tell your friends.

Some aren't yet mollified, according to this NYT story.

   more »
View Article  The boring mantle of leadership

From the Dec. 3 NYT:

Former Gawker editor Choire Sicha on why he quit as managing editor:

“Most of my frustration with the job is of my own making,” Mr. Sicha said by telephone on Saturday. “I’ve completely lost my taste for management, and the thing I realized is that the talent has all the fun.”

View Article  Murdoch team starts taking control at the WSJ

From the NYT:

Richard F. Zannino, Dow Jones’s chief executive, will leave the company after staying for a time to help with the transition, Dow Jones announced yesterday.

People briefed on the matter said that both Mr. Zannino and L. Gordon Crovitz, the publisher of The Wall Street Journal, would be succeeded by trusted lieutenants of Rupert Murdoch soon after the takeover was complete.

Executives at both companies say there will be a broader sweep of the upper echelon at Dow Jones in the next few weeks, both to eliminate duplication and to make way for Mr. Murdoch’s people.

Mr. Zannino will be succeeded by Les Hinton, the executive chairman of News International ...

And as has been widely anticipated, Robert J. Thomson, editor of The Times of London, will take the place of Mr. Crovitz, publisher of The Journal.

View Article  Nowhere to run, nowhere to hide

From the NYT:

Passengers may soon hear a new in-flight announcement: “You can now log on.”

Starting next week and over the next few months, several United States airlines will test Internet service on their planes.

On Tuesday, JetBlue Airways will begin offering a free e-mail and instant messaging service on one of its planes, while American Airlines, Virgin America and Alaska Airlines plan to offer broader Web access in coming months, probably at a cost around $10 a flight.

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