• 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.
  • Europe's Just About Out Of Internet Addresses
    Strict rationing of these addresses - called IPv4 - has been started by the body that hands them out in Europe. From now on, companies can only make one more application for IPv4 addresses and, if successful, will only get 1,024 of them. In addition, any application for more old addresses must demonstrate how an organisation is using the new, replacement, addressing scheme.
  • Deutsche Telekom, Bertelsmann In Content Factory
    DT's T-Venture arm is amongst those backing Content Fleet, a data-driven startup that identifies content web users want - then writes it for them. Aiming to expand in Europe and to America, Content Fleet is raising a single-digit-million-euro amount from T-Venture, Bertelsmann Digital Media Investment and Neuhaus Partners, which all previously put EUR2.5 million in to the outfit.
  • Kindle, Plug-in Media To Produce Online Games
    UK-based family entertainment producer Kindle Entertainment and digital media prodco Plug-in Media have been commissioned by the BBC to produce two online games based on two new Kindle kids series, Leonardo and Get Well Soon. The first game features 3D chase gameplay in an interactive comic strip format. The Leonardo game lets users play as the title character and drive his inventions through Renaissance Florence attempting to capture the evil Il Drago and his henchmen who have stolen Leonardo's vehicle designs.
  • Tank Bows Interactive Pop-up For Fashion Week
    A niche fashion publisher will launch a new app designed to bring its quarterly magazine to life with more than 100 videos and interviews. Tank Magazine, a quarterly UK magazine dedicated to contemporary culture, covering art, architecture, fashion, current affairs, and music, has spent six months developing the app, which they claim will turn the magazine into a "pop-up book for adults".
  • Twitter Offers Geo-Targeting In UK For Brands
    Twitter is providing marketers with the tools to target UK consumers with location-specific promotions in an expansion of its its geo-targeting marketing services. The service for Promoted Tweets and Promoted Accounts allows marketers to target users in individual cities and metropolitan areas. It launched in the UK Thursday and will also roll out in Japan and more widely in the US following a trial in several cities including New York in July.
  • Social Media Boosting Estate Sales
    The research, by property company Move With Us, found that Facebook is the number one social networking site that property sales companies are turning to. In fact, 45% of those quizzed, admitted having their own page on the site. Twitter came in second place with 35%. Move with Us say on mwuplc.co.uk: "With a plethora of social media websites providing marketing and customer interaction for free and with consumer shopping habits changing along with them, it's important to take advantage of these opportunities."
  • Danes Report Spotify May Offer HBO TV
    Rumours that Spotify may diversify from music to TV have cropped up almost since the service began four years ago. The latest peddler is Danish public broadcaster TV2, whose Beep tech site says it has learned that Spotify is negotiating to distribute HBO's upcoming HBO Nordic over-the-top pay-TV service across Sweden, Norway, Finland and Denmark. Spotify's PR folks are being strategically coy, telling paidContent: "There's always a lot of speculation surrounding Spotify but it's something we never comment on." HBO Nordic's Danish reps also gave us a no-comment. Curious.
  • Prototype Of 'Smart' Newspaper Released
    A print version of the Lancashire Evening Post has been created with a button to allow readers to press the newspaper and play audio. The "smart" newspaper is the latest prototype from an 18-month research project led by the University of Central Lancashire. Called Interactive Newsprint, the project aims to find a way of connecting a print newspaper to the internet, which researchers believe could offer news organisations new ways of discovering exactly which articles and adverts readers are interested, much in the same way as they gather audience data from content viewed online.
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