The Guardian
Britain's Future has emerged as the UK biggest political advertiser on Facebook. "The Guardian" refers to the group, which has promoted its no-deal Brexit with GBP340,000 worth of Facebook advertising, as "obscure" because it is unclear who is behind its funding.
The Telegraph
"The Telegraph" has the insider story of Facebook's new chief spin doctor, and former Deputy Prime Minister, Nick Clegg, has been holding meetings with European politicians to plead that tighter regulation would make its business model impossible. The paper believes the key issue is the social giants feeling constrained over processing customer data.
Campaign
Virgin Media has appointed Adam & Eve/DDB as its advertising agency after a competitive pitch, "Campaign" reveals.
BBC
The House of Lords has called for internet giants to be more effectively regulated through a single organisation. The BBC reveals that the Lords decided current content moderation action is too slow.
NetImperative
Netimperative is covering what is believed to be The Queen's first instagram post, a copy of a letter sent to Prince Albert by Charles Babbage concerning the computational machine that he had created, with the help of Ada Lovelace, to lay the foundation of modern computing.
Campaign
"Campaign" is announcing WPP's creativity focus is being underline today with the announcement of MediaCom's first ECD. Tom Curtis was previously head of the agency's content marketing firm, Beyond Advertising.
Press Gazette
The Culture Secretary, Jeremy Wright, has called on YouTube to reconsider its decision not to ban far-right activist Tommy Robinson. "Press Gazette" reports the call follows the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, Tom Watson, warning parliament of an incident in which the campaigner videoed himself knocking on a journalist's front door, making threats.
The Guardian
Facebook has deleted more than a hundred accounts based in the UK believed to be spreading disinformation and publishing hate speech. "The Guardian" reveals the sites were spreading ultra right wing and left wing views and were deemed guilty of divisive hate speech.
Campaign
Havas Media's London and New York teams have partnered with Facebook, JCDecaux, The Economist and the Westfield Shopping Centre to run a "She Is Now Impossible To Ignore" outdoor and print campaign to make International Women's Day, "Campaign" writes. The ad features the first African-American woman to become Deputy Director at NASA.
Sky News
"Sky News" believes that Mark Zuckerberg's vow to concentrate on Facebook privacy is yet another step borrowed from Snapchat.