Richard Hartley

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I finally won the New Yorker cartoon caption competition

Film critic Roger Ebert recounts a proud moment – beating the editorial censors and seeing his joke in print

ABCe: Mail Online returns to double-digit growth

DMGT network's daily average browsers rise 16.5% on February, as the Guardian's traffic improves by more than 10%. By Mark Sweney

Vatican newspaper goes online – but readers will soon have to pay

Italian edition of L'Osservatore Romano will be available free until September, when a 'very low' charge will come in

Keeping it local: regional theatre needs new media

Matthew Austin: With local listings magazines and newspapers in trouble, arts organisations across the UK must embrace the blogosphere

Royal wedding app launched by Mirror

Stuart Dredge: Mirror: Wills & Kate a Royal Love Story for iPhone and iPad available on Apple's App Store for £1.19

INM chief issues ad revenue warning

Independent News & Media's Gavin O'Reilly plans to expand internet business as recessionary pressures depress ad market. By Lisa O'Carroll

New York Times to charge for global website access from 28 March

Users in Canada have to pay monthly subscriptions from Thursday ahead of global rollout at end of March. By Mark Sweney

The Blizzard digital football magazine kicks off on ‘pay what you want’ basis

Journalists' collective follows Radiohead's financial model with low-key launch of 'in-depth' quarterly download. By Mark Sweney

iCorrect: the website where celebrities are righting the wrongs

A new website, iCorrect, is offering celebrities the opportunity to put the record straight about the untruths that are printed about them in the media

SXSW 2011: Jay Rosen on bloggers v journalists

New York University's professor of journalism hits out at on partisans on both sides who keep the feud alive. By Ian Katz

Condé Nast UK to invest more in iPad apps

Stuart Dredge: GQ to make tablet debut, while Wired goes monthly and Vogue gets more special editions

Haymarket gauging implications of Apple’s new iOS subscription rules

Stuart Dredge: Magazine publisher alive to the potential to market its magazines as cross-platform content

Trinity Mirror to launch paid-for web services

Trinity Mirror chief Sly Bailey outlines company's plans for apps as well as services such as web design, social media strategy and online PR. By Mark Sweney

Europe’s highest court to rule on Google privacy battle in Spain

Court to decide whether Spain's data protection authority has power to demand removal of newspaper articles from search engine. By Josh Halliday

Pearson on collision course with Apple over app terms

Announcing full-year results, chief executive warns Financial Times could go elsewhere if Apple refuses to give up customer information. By Mark Sweney

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About

  • About Richard Hartley
  • Richard Hartley’s Work
  • Location

Film & Tech News

  • The Guardian view on OnlyFans: revelations of abusive middlemen merit MPs’ attention
  • UK attorney general tells staff to stop using X amid disinformation concerns
  • California ‘billionaire tax’ makes ballot despite opposition from tech moguls
  • ‘Ordinary people are being erased’: one director’s audacious fightback against AI – featuring Frinton
  • Don’t wait for Prime Day. We found the 31 best early deals from Amazon and its competitors
  • Aardman exhibition marks animation studio’s half a century in Bristol
  • Post your questions for Minions supremo Pierre Coffin
  • We must be alive to the dangers of a UK social media ban – and the way to really help young people
  • Girls Like Girls review – Sapphic teen romance is a precious and predictable yawn-a-thon
  • Farage trying to block ‘Britcoin’ plans that could be costly for billionaire donor
  • The best LED face masks in the UK, tested: 11 light therapy devices that are worth the hype
  • ‘It’s where the poetry is written in cinema language’: the female editors behind cinema’s masterpieces
  • Gig workers are endlessly exploited. AI could make more of us share their fate
  • Tell us your favourite film of 2026 so far
  • As Spielberg confirms whether ET was ‘slimy or dry’, we enter a new age of the celebrity interview
  • La Cabina/El Televisor review – horror and anxiety on the air and down the line in Franco’s Spain
  • Taliban order ban on smartphones as officials shown destroying devices
  • ‘The masturbation scene wasn’t a big deal’: Théodore Pellerin on tackling his new film Nino’s challenges
  • The malignant rise of OnlyFans managers: ‘It’s exploiting. It’s grooming. It’s predatory’
  • Inspired by Ukraine, and worried by China: Taiwan teaches its citizens how to fly drones
  • Daveigh Chase, child star known for Lilo & Stitch and The Ring, dies aged 35
  • ‘It makes no sense’: 16- and 17-year-olds on UK social media ban
  • The best power banks and battery packs in the UK for reliable charging on the go, tested
  • Teddie Beverley obituary
  • Apocalypse when? ‘Earth’s Black Box’ to be installed in remote Tasmanian airfield
  • UK critical infrastructure hit by 200 cyber incidents in a year, agency says
  • Legislation proposed to stop lawsuits used to silence journalists and whistleblowers
  • Fears for Xbox as it puts its developers on the chopping block once again
  • I had a blood clot. An AI diagnosis may have saved my life
  • Killing Anna review – the amazing catfishing operation that flushed out Syria massacre perpetrator

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