The Guardian
The star and creator of "Fleabag," Phoebe Waller-Bridge, has announced she has signed a deal to make content exclusively for Amazon Prime Video, according to "The Guardian."
The Mirror UK
Project xCloud, which allows users to play games on a mobile device, is coming to the UK next month, "The Mirror" reports.
Marketing Week
Starbucks has won a GBP1m prize from Channel 4 for challenging stereotypes in advertising. The campaign is not expected to run until February and was created by Iris. The prize will be paid through GBP1m worth of advertising time, "Marketing Week" reveals.
Campaign
DC Thomson has launched a magazine called "Platinum" for women over age 55, "Campaign" reveals.
The Drum
"The Drum" brings news that Mastercard believes a brand should not only have a voice but also a flavour. The company has baked two intersecting macaroons to represent its logo. Apparently one flavour portrays passion and the other optimism.
NetImperative
London is second only in fintech investment to San Francisco, according to the latest figures from London & Partners and Innovate Finance, Netimperative reports. New York comes in third place.
BBC
Google has won a landmark court case in Europe that means it was right to insist the EU's "right to be forgotten" rules only apply within the trading bloc. The BBC reveals that the case means Google needs only to remove links to information a person has requested should be forgotten within the EU and that the links can remain open in the rest of the world.
Wired
"Wired" has a timely reminder that one of the impacts of a no-deal Brexit, which is often overlooked in the headlines, is that data could cease to flow freely. In a worst-case scenario, the magazine reveals that data could still flow out of the UK, but companies within the UK could find it impossible to gather data in the EU and bring it back to the UK for processing.
Campaign
"Campaign" is warning that there could be job losses ahead as John Lewis is rumoured to be considering merging its marketing team with its Waitrose counterpart.
The Telegraph
Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic company is planning to move into flying cars, according to "The Telegraph."