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Social media is changing our digital news habits: but to varying degrees in US and UK – David Levy and Damian Radcliffe

Digital MediaDigital technology has dramatically reshaped the news and media industries in the past decade. We’ve left behind a world where established news brands could rely on reaching large audiences and hence secure advertising revenues. Now there is huge uncertainty about business models, even as digital gives consumers more convenient access to news than ever before. Continue reading

Law and Media Round Up – 20 June 2016

weekly-roundupThe press was united in horror this week, reacting to the news that Labour MP Jo Cox was murdered outside a constituency surgery. The news was on the front page of every paper the following day, with many publications leading with the statement from her husband: “Jo believed in a better world and she fought for it every day”. Continue reading

The horror of Jo Cox’s death has forced a nation to pause for thought: now the media must sober up – Christoph Meyer

Jo Cox FlowersThe tone and volume of the Brexit debate had been growing steadily more shrill over the past few weeks as Britain got ever closer to its big, once-in-a-generation decision over membership of the EU. The campaign pitted erstwhile political allies against each other in parliament and on the hustings, while in pubs, clubs and family homes friendships and family ties have been sorely tested. Continue reading

Analysis shows extent of press bias towards Brexit – David Deacon, Dominic Wring, Emily Harmer, James Stanyer, and John Downey

image-20160616-15082-rmgg5jThe Sun’s declaration of support for the Leave campaign in the EU referendum might seem entirely predictable. After all, the paper has been at the forefront of EU-bashing for decades, most memorably in its “Up Yours Delors” headline from 1990 when it stated its forthright views on proposals for a European Currency Unit. Continue reading

Citizen journalism and news blogs: why media councils don’t care (yet) – Adeline Hulin

AIPCEMedia councils in Europe were set up primarily to deal with traditional forms of media (mainly print and sometimes broadcast), yet now all members of the Alliance of Independent Press Councils of Europe (“AIPCE”) – a loose network of national, voluntary self-regulatory organisations set up to deal with complaints about editorial content from citizens) have extended their jurisdiction online, to online versions of traditional media outlets and, increasingly, to online-only news websites. Continue reading

Google and the “Right to delist”: where are we now?

EraseThe decision in Google Spain gave data subjects the “right to delist” – to require search engines to remove links to personal data which was “inadequate, irrelevant or excessive”. Google’s transparency report shows that it has received 53,913 removal requests relating to 202,846 URLs from individuals with relationships to the UK.  It has removed a total of 78,704 URLs or 38.8%. Continue reading

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