8am: Viz magazine has axed the Fat Slags, one of its most infamous cartoon strips, after their big screen adaptation was branded the worst ever British film. By John Plunkett.
Google, the increasingly powerful internet search engine, could overhaul the way books are sold with a planned service that allows users to search full texts and buy titles online. By David Teather.
Boris Johnson might like to portray himself as the ultimate young fogey but the Spectator editor has placed himself at the vanguard of the digital revolution by becoming the first Conservative MP to launch an online diary. By Owen Gibson.
Victor Keegan: CBS's admission that its story of George Bush's special treatment when with the Texas air national guard was deeply flawed is being seen as a key victory for the new 'blogging' community of the internet against old media.
Magazine group Future Network, publisher of the gaming bibles for Xbox and PlayStation fans, yesterday assured investors that falling sales of gaming titles would not harm the company's growth prospects. By Dan Milmo.
Hollywood film star Gwyneth Paltrow revealed today she was planning to press charges against paparazzi photographers who follow her around and take pictures of her in London. By Owen Gibson.
Citizen Black, Toronto film-maker Debbie Melnyk's 'warts-and-all' documentary about Conrad Black, tells us nothing new about the former Telegraph tycoon, writes Denis Seguin.
10.15am: A local newspaper in America has threatened legal action against Michael Moore, claiming his anti-Bush documentary Fahrenheit 9/11 'misrepresented' it. By Jason Deans.
5.45pm: Ewan McGregor today won damages from defendants including the Sun and the Daily Record over pictures the papers printed of him and his family. By Chris Tryhorn.
Stephen Glass was one of the brightest young reporters at New Republic magazine - until it emerged he made large parts of his stories up. Aida Edemariam, one of those he fooled, reports.