Can a crowd really edit our daily paper?

Victor Keegan: One of the most fascinating questions is what, if any, future there is for newspapers as the creative destruction of the internet gathers pace.

Wheatcroft: why papers will survive

Sunday Telegraph editor Patience Wheatcroft has spoken for the first time on why she believes weekend newspapers will survive the shift of readers to online. By Mark Sweney.

Hollywood lines up Maxwell – the movie

The colourful life and bizarre death of Robert Maxwell, the disgraced proprietor of the Daily Mirror in the 1980s, is to be made into a Hollywood film. By Stephen Brook.

Web ad spending soars

11.30am: While ad spend in the press slid 3.7% in 2005, the internet posted another bumper performance, rising 62.3%, according to the Advertising Association. By Mark Sweney.

Sun moves into free listings

8am: The Sun has launched a massive free classifieds website that already carries more than 2m adverts. By Stephen Brook.

Telegraph podcasts from the pub

The Telegraph has become the latest newspaper to launch a World Cup-themed podcast, while Times Online's Skinner and Baddiel are topping the charts. By Mark Sweney.

Websites wreck ‘photos of the year’ scoop

The first pictures of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie's baby were leaked on the internet to the fury of the glossy celebrity magazines that had paid millions for them. By Owen Gibson.

Hello! threatens to sue over Jolie baby picture

Hello! has threatened legal action against websites that published a leaked image of Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt with their newborn daughter Shiloh, which appeared online this morning. By Leigh Holmwood.

Brad and Angelina sell baby pics for charity

1pm: Celebrity magazines and tabloid newspapers the world over will be fighting to get their hands on the first pictures of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie's baby, with the proceeds going to charity. By Julia Day.

Sharon Stone wins damages from Mail

The Daily Mail today issued a formal apology and agreed to pay 'substantial' damages to Sharon Stone over allegations that she left her son in a car while she had a late-night dinner. By Chris Tryhorn.