Computer Business Review
An Ofcom report reveals that 16% of all website traffic in the UK was through a mobile device. The UK was found to have one of the highest penetrations of mobile technologies with 58% owning a smartphone while fewer than 19%own a tablet. Over 50% of UK consumers used a laptop to connect to the internet while another 12% used smartphones and other connected devices to access the internet. The report revealed that only 37% of people actually use a desktop computer as the most frequent way of accessing the internet.
Digital Spy
Ralph Rivera, director of Future Media explained in a blog: "Innovation is at the heart of the BBC and has been since its inception. "From when the BBC opened its first radio station in 1922 and launched the world's first regular television service in 1936 few could have imagined just what impact broadcasting would make on our everyday lives." He added: "Just as radio and TV did before it, the digital revolution has fundamentally changed how our audiences access news, information and programmes.
The Telegraph
His Holiness began the morning with around 600,500 followers on his English-language @pontifex account on the social network, and tweeted for the first time at 10.30am BST with a message of peace and thanks. Pope Benedict XVI added an average of 2,000 new followers a minute after his first tweet (above) was read around the world, bringing his English-language online acolytes to almost 700,000 within an hour.
PaidContent.org
The Danish firm has been building a platform for consumers to review independent online retailers. Now it wants to break America. But does Trustpilot need to work hard on improving its own visibility, or just syndicate its reviews to Google? But, as it tries to unlock the large US market, the outfit may nevertheless still face challenges at home. Despite operating in the UK, France, Germany, Netherlands and Italy, it is far from well known.
Journalism.co.uk
French news site Owni, which specialises in data journalism, is inviting users to contribute funding ideas to help maintain the site. The website has launched a wiki inviting users to contribute their own ideas about how Owni can find additional revenue, along with a hashtag #ownioupas. Owni's home page says: "Owni is not closing down. Owni is for sale".
M&M Global
Microsoft is expanding its MSN offering across Europe with the launch of a brand new online channel, called MSN Celebrity. The new channel will offer the latest news, features, opinion and gossip around some of the world's most talked about celebrities. Features include global and local daily news and video, celebs caught on camera, and best and worst dressed celebs.
Press Gazette
Mainstream journalistic standards could plunge if laws are not enforced against bloggers, Tweeters and websites, Lord Justice Leveson warned today. In an address as part of his Australian lecture tour, the media ethics inquiry judge said journalists might be tempted to cut corners or break the law to "steal a march" on their online competitors. Lord Justice Leveson told the University of Melbourne there was a "pernicious and false" belief that the law did not apply to the internet.
The Media Briefing
Book publishers may have had little choice but to adopt ebooks, but they have been wary of them, in particular the threats from lower prices and piracy. But for news publishers, ebooks offer a far less risky way to turn content into cash - leveraging archive material at minimal expense opens up new revenue streams. And the potential market is huge: Britons bought GBP84 million worth of ebooks in the first half of 2012, according to the Publishers' Association.
M&M Global
Click-to-play online video ads are more likely to evoke an emotional reaction from consumers than auto-play ads, according to new research carried out by Undertone and IPG Media Lab. The study used eye tracking, facial coding and panel surveys in order to gauge how consumers react to video advertising. Consumers watching click-to-play video ads were also more engaged and more likely to browse new content or purchase something compared to viewers of auto-play ads, and overall had higher satisfaction scores.
BBC
No 10 says the PM remains committed to giving police and security services new powers to monitor internet activity, despite criticism of current plans. The prime minister's spokesman said he accepted the criticism from MPs and peers of the draft Communications Data Bill and would re-write it. Deputy PM Nick Clegg had threatened to block it unless there was a "rethink".