City A.M.
The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) is to publish its initial findings on whether Google and Facebook dominate the ad-tech industry. City A.M. believes the first findings will be published in "the coming days" before it is likely announced that the organisation will be holding a full-scale review.
Sky News
Uber has submitted its appeal against a TfL decision to strip it of its licence to operate in London. "Sky News" reveals the service will remain open for as long as it takes for the appeal to be fully processed.
BBC
YouTube star PewDiePie has announced he will be taking a break from the channel in the New Year as he is "very tired," the BBC reports. The site reminds readers that despite have more than 100m subscribers the controversial star has been forced to apologise for what were deemed racist and anti-semitic comments in the past.
The Drum
As the nation went out to vote yesterday, research was published by Socialbakers that showed social media sentiment had turned negative against the BBC and Channel 4. "The Drum" points out that this is a worrisome trend for the two broadcasters who were accused of bias from all sides during the election campaign.
The Guardian
GPM, the London-based production company behind "Line of Duty", has raised $180m which "The Guardian" has said will be invested in building a Hollywood-style studio in the UK.
Press Gazette
All paid-for newspapers have seen drops in their circulation meaning that although its print circulation is down 13% year-on-year in November, "The Sun" is still the UK's biggest selling newspaper with 1.2m copies sold on average, "Press Gazette" reports.
MediaTel
Mediatel has an interesting article on how Vodafone's mature strategy is to rely less on online media because social platforms are high volume but low attention, the site reveals.
NetImperative
Only half of UK consumers would consider buying from a company with a rating of less than four stars, new research from search agency BrightLocal suggests, according to Netimperative.
Press Gazette
Newsquest has averted a strike in Scotland by agreeing that after eight journalists taking voluntary redundancy it will now not be seeking compulsory redundancies, "Press Gazette" reports.
Campaign
If you are looking for a rundown on the advertising campaigns run by the major parties in last night's election head to "Campaign," which has a very interesting insight into how Boris was trusted far more to run the country than Corbyn ending up in Labour. For some reason, it also turns out that Labour was paying a CPM rate twice as high as the Conservatives?