• How The Papers Reacted To The London Bridge Attack
    The Guardian's media section tracks the front-page coverage of the weekend's London attack as the "Daily Mail" declares "Enough Is Enough" and The Mirror contrasted the "Monsters" and "Heroes."
  • #DancingPoliceman Embodies One Love Manchester Concert
    It will come to be known as the symbol of the One Love Manchester benefit gig thrown by Ariana Grande just two weeks after the horrific suicide bombing outside her Manchester Arena concert, "The Telegraph" reports. Live BBC coverage cut away to the local bobby dancing in a circle with young concertgoers and the pictures, along with the #DancingPoliceman hashtag, went viral.
  • Facebook Defends Itself Over Extremism Comments By Theresa May
    Facebook has struck back at the UK Prime Minister's assertion that it, and other tech giants, could be doing more to combat extremism. It responded that it is already cooperating by removing extremist content. Sky News speculates that the PM may have to use, for the first time, the right that allows the government to demand to see unencrypted messages sent over social media.
  • Google To Ban Bad Ads
    Google has vowed to remove ads that don't meet standards set by the Coalition For Better Ads. This would mean Chrome barring pop-ups, full-screen scrollovers and auto-play video ads, according to "Marketing Week."
  • Kelkoo Sues Google Over Search Monopoly
    It never rains but when it pours for Google. As "The Telegraph" reports, the tech giant is due to face a massive fine from the EU in the coming weeks over abuse of its search monopoly. The paper adds that shopping comparison site Kelkoo has launched an individual lawsuit. The site claims Google's monopoly has disadvantaged it to the tune of many millions of pounds
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