• Somo's Sleight: Mobile Is Bigger Than Just M-Commerce
    The retail implications of mobile media go far beyond so-called “m-commerce” -- the instant conversion of a retail purchase via a mobile device -- but likely have even greater long-term effects for consumers and marketers alike, a top strategist at London-based mobile agency Somo Global said Tuesday during a presentation at OMMA Mobile Europe in London. In fact, that executive, Somo Chief Strategy Officer Ross Sleight, went to far as to assert: “I think in e-commerce, we have taken the fun out of shopping.”
  • European Food Companies Connect With Young Adults
    Young adults in Europe are communicating with food brands in new ways – and expect an emotional connection through multiple online and offline media, according to director of innovation and insight at Mintel, David Jago. Jago said that a bulge around the 18-30 age group is emerging in the European market, with awareness growing among food manufacturers that this is generall a well-educated and well-connected demographic that requires a different marketing approach.  
  • Belarus Authorities Detain Foreign Media
    Belarus authorities on Tuesday moved against international media ahead of a parliamentary election, detaining photographers attempting to record an anti-government demonstration. Uniformed police in the capital Minsk took into custody still photographers working for the English Reuters news agency and the US-headquartered Associated Press, as well as a television camera operator for the German channel ZDF, a statement from the Belarusian Association of Journalists (BAJ) said.
  • French Court Blocks Nude Royal Photos
    The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have won an injunction in a French court preventing the celebrity magazine Closer from publishing further paparazzi shots of the duchess sunbathing topless. Mondadori France, Closer's publishing company, will face a hefty fine if it publishes any more photographs or transmits them to any third party via email or any other means following Tuesday's judgment. A court in Nanterre, near Paris, opened a separate criminal investigation on Tuesday into charges that Closer and a photographer breached the privacy of Prince William and Catherine by publishing the topless photos.
  • Jobs Could Be Axed At Irish Paper Due To Nude Duchess Photos
    Fears have deepened in Dublin that up to 100 jobs could be lost at the Irish Daily Star, with unions predicting the media owner Richard Desmond would stand by his threat to "close down" the joint venture over the Duchess of Cambridge pictures scandal.
  • No Hockey A Windfall For Networks
    Canada's cable TV sports networks are going to make more money by not showing NHL games this fall than if the NHL had started the season on time. To understand the inverse logic of the lockout and its victims, consider that an average regular season broadcast in Canada can have production costs of about $600,000; typical advertising revenue for that game comes in anywhere from $150,000 to $200,000 short of production costs.
  • UK Museum Restores First Known Color Film
    A piece of history has been rescued from oblivion with the National Media Museum in Bradford, United Kingdom, revealing a restoration of the first known color motion picture. Shot as a test reel by British inventor Edward Raymond Turner, it was long thought to have been a practical failure until restored by the museum, which is showing the film to the public for the first time 110 years after its making.
  • Finnish Social Media Firm Moving To U.S.
    The founders of Transfluent, a Finnish companywhich translates social media, websites and smartphone apps are about to relocate to New York. What's more, they've just picked up $1m in angel funding to set up that office, and have also opened an office in Singapore. The company has 15,000 freelancers working in 60 languages.
  • French Media Want GoogleTo pay To Link Content
    Leading French newspaper publishers called on the government last week to adopt a law to force Internet search engines such as Google to pay them for using their content.
  • Wikipedia Makeover Recognizes Female Pioneers
    They are some of the most important names in modern science, pioneers in their fields. But, unless you work in academia, it is unlikely that you will have ever heard of them. All that is set to change, though, as the Royal Society hosts a mass "edit-a-thon" to improve the Wikipedia profiles of leading female scientists who have been ignored and overlooked by the online encyclopedia's male-dominated army of contributors.
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