Press Gazette
While celebrating "The Guardian" hitting its target to break even by this year, "Press Gazette" reminds that the milestone was not hit easily and came with the loss of 450 jobs.
The Guardian
The Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt will today ramp up the Government's rhetoric against Russia Today (RT) by labelling the channel a "weapon of disinformation," according to a report in "The Guardian."
Marketing Week
"Marketing Week" is reminding adland today that it must not have blind faith in AI because it has been shown to exhibited serious flaws and bias which might lead marketers to unwittingly come to ill-informed decisions that could impact financial returns.
MediaTel
The incoming IPA President has outlined to MediaTel how he believes agencies need to evolve to better partner with clients as they navigate a time of unprecedented change. The new direction has been dubbed the "reimagine" manifesto.
City A.M.
The Prime Minister has sacked the Defence Secretary, Gavin Williamson, after he was identified as the prime suspect in the leak of information to "The Telegraph" over Huawei being allowed to install non-core elements of the UK's 5G infrastructure, City AM reports. The former Defence Secretary strenuously denies the accusation.
BBC
Twitter and Facebook got a grilling yesterday at the Houses Of Parliament and were told they need to do much more to protect, in particular, female MPs from a tirade of abuse and threats, the BBC reports.
The Telegraph
A new survey shows London tech companies are struggling to raise cash and attract talent due to Brexit uncertainty, "The Telegraph" writes.
Campaign
Electronic Arts has confirmed a move away from Starcom as it shortlists just Hearts & Science and M/SIX to take over global media duties, "Campaign" reports. ID Comms is running the process.
Marketing Week
"Marketing Week" has the inside story at ITV pivots away from what it calls its "cosy" reputation to be more leading edge on brand-tracking metrics through partnerships with YouGov and Ipsos.
BBC
The UK Government is considering drafting a new law that would tighten security of devices connected to the Internet of Things (IoT). The BBC reports that one plan is to ensure every device is shipped with its own unique password to provide better protection against hackers.