• Competition In Germany Hurt KPN's Q3
    KPN failed to meet analysts' third-quarter profits expectations due in large part to savage competition in Germany. The operator said its German E-Plus subsidiary was forced to cut pricing as customers searched for better deals. E-Plus, normally a key profit centre for KPN, signed up 210,000 new subscribers on monthly contracts during the quarter, but lower pricing resulted in a 9% drop in quarterly EBITDA according to Reuters.
  • UK Youth More Often Use Mobile For Web
    UK children are becoming media multitaskers and are turning to smartphones and tablets for internet access, according to the latest report from the UK's media regulator, Ofcom, published this week. The findings of the report show that the way children access the internet and consume content is changing fast even though the proportion of UK children who access the internet has not increased year-on-year for the first time since the first annual report was done in 2005.
  • N.Y. Times Backs Thompson Despite Scandal
    In an article headline 'Sulzberger Expresses Support for Mark Thompson, Incoming Chief Executive' Arthur Sulzberger, chairman of of The New York Times, has thrown his weight behind the former BBC Director General as questions swirl about the cancellation of the Jimmy Savile paedophile documentary last December. The article bylined BY THE EDITORS appears on the Times website on Thursday.
  • Homeless Sell Codes For Digital Charity Magazine
    UK pedestrians are used to seeing high street The Big Issue sellers, who keep a portion of the cover price for each title they sell. Now The Big Issue In The North, a Manchester-based edition, will instead ask its homeless to sell a printed card containing a code that can be redeemed for a PC or mobile version of the magazine (via announcement).
  • Trinity Mirror Sites Launch Daily Liveblogs
    The liveblogs, which are currently being run by CoverItLive on MEN's websiteand ScribbleLive on the Daily Post's website, offer a daily feed of the latest news and information updates from the newsrooms. It is part of an experiment by Trinity Mirror regionals as part of a bid to place a "new emphasis on breaking news", digital publishing director David Higgerson told Journalism.co.uk.
  • Italian Publishers' Ad Firm Gets Shot In Arm
    An open online advertising consortium of Italian publishers may soon get a leg up after its chosen ad vendor took a EUR2.5 million ($3.2 million) investment to develop new technology. Salerno-based 4W Marketplace, which powers the Premium Publisher Network, is taking the money from VC house Principia SGR. The Premium Publisher Network was formed by newspaper groups RCS and L'Espresso three years ago and now numbers dozens of members.
  • Asia Trounces Europe, US In Social Media Use
    Asian markets top a new global social engagement league table that measures how often and how much consumers use social media platforms. The Social Engagement Benchmark fromGlobalWebIndex reveals that consumers in fast-growing economies are more likely to use a social network or a microblog, upload a photo or video or review a product or brand than consumers in more mature countries.
  • UK City To Put Wi-Fi, Broadband Everywhere
    Free wi-fi across trams and buses, a 'Manchester app' and ultrafast broadband in every home will help put the city at the forefront of the digital revolution. It follows the announcement last month that the Sharp Project - the city's creative media centre in east Manchester - is to expand to two new locations as part of plans that will see leading 3D company EON Virtual set up their European headquarters there.
  • Yelp Gives Qype 5 Stars, Buys It
    Yelp allows users to connect with local businesses that are rated on a 5-point scale. Site visitors review businesses as well as giving details about businesses addresses, hours, and credibility. The acquisition of the popular European review site, Qype, brings Yelp more than 2 million reviews and 15 million unique visitors across 13 countries. The company acquired Qype for approximately $50 million.
  • Newsquest's Streatham Guardian Drops Print
    The Guardian, which has been under review since the beginning of October, will become an online-only title after the final print edition is published on 15 November. No jobs are to be lost as a result of the change, with reporters coninuing to work on the website and for the Wandsworth Guardian series, which has an average overall circulation of 53,691.
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