The Telegraph
Research from Sport England reveals that a quarter of women find social media female fitness influencers make them feel bad about themselves, The Telegraph reports.
Sky News
Senior officials in Washington have again urged Boris Johnson not to allow Huawei technology to be used in the UK's 5G networks, saying any such move would be "madness," "Sky News" reports.
City A.M.
It may not come as a huge shock, but London leads the UK in the creation of start-ups, according to research featured in City A.M.
BBC
Mark Hamill, the actor who plays Luke Skywalker in the "Star Wars" films, has quit Facebook over its policy of allow political ads to run without proper fact-checking, the BBC reports.
Press Gazette
In the wake of Boris' commanding general election victory last month, media bosses have identified they should do more to challenge "half truths" spread by politicians, "Press Gazette" reports.
Campaign
The first episode of the winter edition of "Love Island" attracted a peak audience of 2.9m, this was down from a 3.7m peak for the opening show of the last summer edition last June, "Campaign" writes.
The Guardian
"The Guardian" reveals the Duke of Cambridge and Duke of Sussex are denying newspaper stories that they have fallen out. The pair reference one article in particular without naming it, prompting the paper to suggest it could have been a report in "The Times" that the Duke of Cambridge's behaviour forced Harry and Meghan to retreat from front line royal duties.
Campaign
"Campaign" is reporting BT has joined a throng of major brands by sponsoring an E-Sports team, the Excel Esports.
The Telegraph
Former online child safety czar, Baroness Joanna Shields, has told "The Telegraph" the big tech companies should be forced to pay compensation to childhood victims of abuse, in a similar way that energy companies have to pay for oil spills.
Campaign
Offering advertisers discounts and rebates cost the "Daily Mail" GBP24m last year, according to financial reports seen by Campaign.