AltWeeklies Wire

PIPA is the New SOPAnew

Keep Tweeting to protect an open internet.
San Diego CityBeat  |  CityBeat Staff  |  01-17-2012  |  Policy Issues

Simmering SOPAnew

Will a proposed law prevent piracy—or stifle free speech?
Santa Fe Reporter  |  Joey Peters  |  01-09-2012  |  Policy Issues

Heroin.com: Selling Junk Onlinenew

In 2008, New York City's Special Narcotics Prosecutor began leading a team of undercover investigators targeting the drug dealers who used Craigslist to advertise their wares. Three years later, drug dealing on the classified-ads website is still blatant and ubiquitous.
The Village Voice  |  David Shapiro and Joe Coscarelli  |  04-20-2011  |  Drugs

Atlanta City Court Should Waste Less of our Timenew

Making more fines payable online would unclog the court and save citizens grief.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Editorial Board  |  04-06-2011  |  Policy Issues

Patch, the WalMart of News?new

AOL takes on longtime local bloggers with its hyperlocal news sites in Los Angeles.
L.A. Weekly  |  Tibby Rothman  |  09-30-2010  |  Media

In a New Britain Newspaper Saga, the Future of Small-Town Papersnew

If you can read this, you can probably recite what's plaguing the newspaper industry: plummeting ad revenue, online competition and some really dumb choices. But most stories focus on the major players, even though there are more than 1,000 daily and 8,000 weekly newspapers in America.
New Haven Advocate  |  Craig Fehrman  |  01-05-2010  |  Media

Blogger Busted: Free Speech Goes on Trial in Central Illinoisnew

Scott Humphrey, a 57-year-old man from Springfield, Ill., faces four criminal misdemeanor charges for two specific online statements that he made on a political blog. Sources say civil suits and criminal charges will increasingly be used to stop speech on the internet.
Illinois Times  |  Amanda Robert  |  10-15-2009  |  Media

Education Generation's Microfinancing Funds Students Around the Globenew

While Facebook and other social-networking sites have taken off as a mostly recreational way for people to connect with each other, a Vancouver-based charity is using the technology to change people's lives.
The Georgia Straight  |  Karen Pinchin  |  08-31-2009  |  Education

The News Wars Are Comingnew

If it's fight or die on the new media landscape, does anyone think traditional media won't fight? The classic portents of serious battle are converging.
Chicago Reader  |  Michael Miner  |  08-17-2009  |  Media

What's Behind Rupert Murdoch's Paid-Content Push?new

News Corp. head honcho Rupert Murdoch recently announced he'll begin charging for online content at his company's news sites. Is this a desperate move to help the bottom line, or a last-gasp grab at journalistic respectability?
Boston Phoenix  |  Adam Reilly  |  08-12-2009  |  Media

Rethinking Liberal Arts in the Digital Agenew

They didn't teach genderfuck, iteration, or micropolitics when I was in college. But times have changed. And nowadays, they maybe should consider it. At least so says Tim Carmody, who, along with his co-proprietors of the blog Snarkmarket and a coterie of other Web-based deep thinkers, has put together a book called The New Liberal Arts.
Boston Phoenix  |  Mike Miliard  |  07-23-2009  |  Education

The Peculiar Challenges of Archiving Newspapers in the Information Agenew

Newspapers are practicing a journalism that will probably turn out to be as different from tomorrow's as it is from yesterday's. Transitional periods are fascinating as they happen and damned hard later to reconstruct. How complete will the record be of this one?
Chicago Reader  |  Michael Miner  |  07-07-2009  |  Media

Here Comes the Judge: The Web's Anything-Goes Era Can't Last Forevernew

In short, pretty much anything goes on the internet. But many signs suggest the courts aren't happy with this state of affairs, and web hosts don't expect it to last.
Chicago Reader  |  Michael Miner  |  06-15-2009  |  Media

Kill Your Antennanew

The DTV transition doesn't affect you. And we shouldn't be doing it anyway -- we should get all the spectrum back from the TV companies and use it to extend internet access to everyone.
Portland Phoenix  |  Jeff Inglis  |  01-14-2009  |  Media

Wireless Access Tests Students' Focus in Classnew

As the speed and reliability of campus networks increases by leaps and bounds, wireless internet is changing how students get an education.
The Georgia Straight  |  Karen Pinchin  |  11-04-2008  |  Education

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