• OMMA Mobile Finds New Context in London
    After five years of OMMA Mobile shows in the U.S. (we started on the very day the iPhone launched in 2007), we finally made it across the pond for our first event this week. Significantly, we had to change our own context to get a day of insights that revolved principally around the potential of "context" in marketing.
  • Swiss Kids Tops For Mobile Surfing
    In no other country in Europe do more children surf the Web using their mobile phones than in Switzerland. As a study by the University of Zurich shows, children in Switzerland are adept at handling social media -- they don't surf the Net extensively and only four percent have set their social network profile to "public."
  • German Court Debates Freedom Of Speech
    A top court in Germany on Thursday backed demands by an extreme right-wing party for its newsletter to be distributed at preferential mail rates, citing freedom of the press. The verdict comes amid swirling debate in Europe between liberals and religious leaders about whether free speech is an absolute right.
  • Group Bails On European Online Poker Operations
    International Game Technology has quietly pulled the plug on its online poker operations in Europe, saying the business model had suffered due to regulatory changes. The slot machine manufacturing giant spent $115 million last year to acquire Entraction, a Swedish-based online poker operator with more than 4 million players.
  • Sun Exec Tries To Boost Morale
    The News International chief executive has sought to boost morale in the Sun newsroom after the 21st journalist on the paper was arrested by Scotland Yard police officers. Tom Mockridge called the meeting at Thursday, just hours after a 30-year-old Sun reporter was arrested at his home in south-east London by officers from Operation Tuleta, the investigation into computer hacking which was recently widened to include alleged criminal breaches of privacy. He was the third Sun reporter to be detained this week and the 21st current or former Sun journalist or executive who has been detained since the police made …
  • Sun Journalists, Policeman Held
    Two 'Sun' journalists, a 32-year-old man from Lo ndon and a 51-year-old man from Bristol, are being questioned over claims of conspiracy to corrupt and cause misconduct. The inquiry is investigating allegations of inappropriate payments to police and public officials, and runs alongside Operation Weeting, the probe into phone hacking. Scotland Yard said the arrests were the result of information provided by News Corporation's management standards committee, which was set up in the wake of the phone-hacking scandal.
  • French Police Raid 'Closer' Magazine Offices
    Police have raided the offices of Closer magazine searching for the identity of the photographer who took pictures of the Duchess of Cambridge topless while on holiday in the south of France. Officers arrived at 10am on Wednesday morning at the magazine's headquarters in the Paris suburb of Montrouge. They were reported to have searched the publication's offices and examined journalists' computers.
  • European Business Leaders Get Tech Savvy
    Top experts in advertising and online content from the Middle East and Europe gathered in Beirut Wednesday to show how companies can take business to the next level through better digital content. “It’s not a question of if you do it. It’s how well,” said Marc Dfouni, chief executive at Eastline Marketing, a Beirut-based online advertising firm at DGTL#U’s conference “Embracing the Digital Era,” at the Movenpick hotel in Raou
  • Social Media Provides Brands Forum
    Luxury labels demonstrated the instant selling power of social media during London Fashion Week like never before with videos broadcast live online to the world from shows crammed with tweeting, blogging designers, editors and celebrities. Retail clothing chain Topshop reached the largest online audience for a live-streamed London fashion show on Sunday, with two million viewers tuning in from more than 100 countries to see Topshop Unique's latest collection. More than 200 million people were exposed to images and content from the runway as part of Topshop's partnership with Facebook, where fans were led to Topshop's live-stream from their shopping …
  • Ukraine Warned Against Passing Defamation Bill
    An international media watchdog urged Ukrainian lawmakers on Wednesday to reject a bill that would make defamation a crime, saying it could "threaten the very existence of independent journalism." This week Ukraine's parliament, dominated by President Viktor Yanukovych's allies, tentatively approved a bill that would make defamation punishable by up to five years in prison, restoring a Soviet-era practice that Ukraine abolished 11 years ago.
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