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Lawyer Mark Lewis says he has been contacted by three people since airing of Panorama exposé of Mazher Mahmood
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Clodagh Hartley tells court that double-page spread on fuel and alcohol based on tip-off was replaced by new story. By Lisa O’Carroll
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Paris court orders parent company to remove links across global network, following right to be forgotten online ruling. By Owen Bowcott and Kim Willsher
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Adam Crozier trumpets broadcaster’s best performance for five years while acknowledging viewers have turned off its biggest shows
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New company, which drops words ‘British’ and ‘Broadcasting’ from name, has £11bn in revenues and 20 million customers
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Peter Morgan, who wrote The Queen, and Billy Elliot’s Stephen Daldry, team up for broadcaster’s first UK production. By John Plunkett
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Morning Has Broken, which spoofs real-life tribulations faced by ITV and C4, is among new shows announced by broadcaster
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Lawyer criticises government for not doing more to protect freedom of the press and says Ripa powers are being misused
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Media Monkey: Olympic gymnast joins Sophie Ellis-Bextor, Rachel Stevens, Lisa Riley and Russell Grant for Christmas special
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Media Monkey: Incorrect story about a football punch-up with The Wanted star pitched up on Mail Online
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Ratings for show revealing face of journalist Mazher Mahmood beaten only by Coronation Street amid widespread praise for BBC’s bravery
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John Lewis, once the king of the mawkish, heartstring-pulling festive commercial, has a rival this year in the form of the Sainsbury's first world war film. But which is best?
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I’m A Celebrity ... Get Me Out Of Here! host is currently in Australia for the new series of the reality show
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Supermarket teams up with Royal British Legion to retell story of Christmas Day football match, with all profits from a £1 chocolate bar going to veterans’ charity
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Our roundup of the day's media stories, including the latest on Panorama's allegations against Mazher Mahmood and BSkyB's rebranding as plain Sky
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More than 50 offer support to whistleblowers
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Letters: Might I suggest that perhaps a good start would be for him to reply to the letter that I, along with 29 other victims of press abuse, sent to him on 8 September
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Egyptian presidential decree allows transfer of foreign prisoners to home countries to be tried or serve out sentences
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Mazher Mahmood’s victims say he incited them to commit crimes, including drug dealing and changing evidence
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Joshua Rozenberg: Clifford’s clowning and protestations of innocence during trial should not have led to an increased sentence, judges ruled
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Ally Fogg: In making the first world war beautiful to flog groceries the film-makers have disrespected the millions who suffered in the trenches
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Roy Greenslade asks a series of questions about Mazher Mahmood raised by the BBC's documentary
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Paul Bernal: If Sajid Javid’s speech is indicative of the approach to privacy that we’d see in a Tory bill of rights then we should all be worried
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Joshua Rozenberg: Clifford’s clowning and protestations of innocence during trial should not have led to an increased sentence, judges ruled
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Massive open online courses – Moocs – are key to redressing the digital skills shortage, says Tech City UK’s chief executive Gerard Grech
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Editorial: It’s the biggest challenge since the Savile affair. Time to show some backbone
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David Marsh: Word meanings can sometimes seem counterintuitive, but the government’s latest assault on language should be resisted – not sanctioned
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Brian Cathcart: Sir Alan Moses insults victims of press abuse when blaming the government for unrealistic promises it couldn’t deliver
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Stuart Heritage: The US president and the Facebook founder have both pared down their wardrobes so they can concentrate on changing the world
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Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, the Media Network’s resident business psychologist, examines the psychology of digital trust
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Sir Alan Moses is keen to avoid the bar-room brawling of an industry long used to drinking in the ‘last chance saloon’
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Chris Elliott: Open door: Covering a disease which kills most who catch it is challenging for a newspaper that must respect its deadly properties but write about it in a rational way
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Felix Salmon: The social network seems to have decided to host content itself rather than send users to other websites
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Peter Preston: Attacking the Labour leader so close to an election merely puts a left-leaning publication in a more difficult position editorially
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Peter Preston: Naming the killer of Ann Maguire was not voyeurism, but openness – and, in part, a reaction against institutional secrecy
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Peter Preston: Polling in America’s midterms predicted a close race: it wasn’t. Sometimes local knowledge beats national data
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Newspapers can’t destroy politicians, but they can catch a baleful mood, surf a savage tide
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Stephanie Merritt: By giving the self-styled comic Dapper Laughs his own show, ITV is endorsing his damaging brand of lad culture
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Nick Cohen: It’s no surprise that the Kremlin delights in piping TV propaganda to the world – it is guaranteed a receptive audience
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Little has changed for older women in the wake of the Miriam O’Reilly ageism case, writes former BBC Current Affairs reporter
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Media Monkey: Olympic gymnast joins Sophie Ellis-Bextor, Rachel Stevens, Lisa Riley and Russell Grant for Christmas special
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Media Monkey: Incorrect story about a football punch-up with The Wanted star pitched up on Mail Online
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More than 50 offer support to whistleblowers
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Jack Whitehall quick to point out the irony of former newsreader’s choice of work, on the back of his criticism of BBC3’s ‘drivel’
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Mystery surrounds whereabouts of English PEN quiz trophy – but paper’s quizmasters make it a moot point by winning for second year in succession
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Employees benefit two months after getting a wage rise
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Journalist’s comedy drama about famous Geoffrey Howe speech which led to the fall of Margaret Thatcher set to open next year
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Mail on Sunday's respected columnist decides to go in January
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Panorama will be broadcast later this week
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New post for Telegraph Media Group executive director
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Lambeth defends right to publish monthly magazine
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Sensible merger after a century apart
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Law will also protect journalists' confidential sources
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Brian Cathcart: Sir Alan Moses insults victims of press abuse when blaming the government for unrealistic promises it couldn’t deliver
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About 20,000 people complain about show in which naturalist Paul Rosolie dons ‘snake-proof suit’ and is eaten by anaconda
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A man tricks the 3AW radio station into believing he was the rapper 360 just weeks after the station was tricked by someone pretending to be an Isis leader
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This week's review of adverts from around the world opens with an appropriately creepy offering for Ikea as we approach Halloween
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We have launched our newly redesigned website to our US audience. Find out more about how we got here
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Rob Lowe shows us his creepy side, Jean-Claude Van Damme camps it up, Luis Suarez tests the flexibility of Replay jeans, and David Beckham throws a party
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The former Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee has died aged 93
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Change.org chief Ben Rattray speaks to Jane Martinson about the popularity of his social activism website, and his vision of a fairer society
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Mia Freedman has apologised after comments that compared gay people to paedophiles on The Project
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Watch Sarah Silverman tackle pay inequality in a controversial campaign
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This week's round-up of commercials starts with Mr Bean in a kung fu movie for Snickers and ends with a touching Canadian viral for Cheerios celebrating gay parents
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The cast and crew of Top Gear are pelted with stones as they drive through a town in Argentina, despite having a police escort
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Watch Jeff Goldblum actor channel Liberace and a clip from the archives suggesting George Clooney has 'married' before
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Fox News presenters crack a series of sexist jokes about the UAE's first female fighter pilot
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William Shatner's rendition of Bohemian Rhapsody leads this week's collection and the Yankees shortstop gets (another) fond farewell
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Mischievous raccoons for a French power company lead this week's selection of new commercials, which also includes another look at dadhood from VW
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Plenty of weekends get wasted. They fizzle out before they've even started. But some weekends are special. Some weekends are packed with all the things that make life great. With the Guardian and Observer, you can own the weekend
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Reebok goes back to its Northern roots; a pet treat ad featuring athletic cat owners, food erotica from M&S, and more in this week's selection of ads
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The chairman of the newly formed Independent Press Standards Organisation (Ipso) promises to restore the public's trust in the industry
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After the killings of James Foley and Steven Sotloff, should media organisations be doing more to protect and support freelancers?
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Jason Stone: Harvey Keitel reprises his Pulp Fiction role for Direct Line in the first advert in this week's round-up
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A spokesman for the family of American journalist Steven Sotloff, who was killed by Islamic State (Isis) militants, says Steven loved the Arabic world
Time for an investigation into the fake sheikh after Panorama revelations
Roy Greenslade asks a series of questions about Mazher Mahmood raised by the BBC's documentary