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- Huffington Post continues to evolve 5 years on
- As the Huffington Post marks its fifth anniversary, its proclaimed mission to be an internet newspaper gains more credence every time its traffic surpasses the websites of its print brethren.
- B.C. climatologist sues National Post
- A prominent University of Victoria climate researcher says he's been repeatedly defamed by the National Post and has launched a lawsuit against the national newspaper.
- China's quake victims to be honoured
- China will hold a national day of mourning Wednesday to honour more than 2,000 people killed by a devastating earthquake in a remote Tibetan region.
- Foreign media control opposed by most: poll
- A majority of Canadians would prefer broadcasting and communications companies stay in Canadian hands, a new Harris-Decima survey suggests.
- Glee hits high note at gay media awards
- The TV musical series Glee has captured best comedy program at the annual media awards handed out by GLAAD, the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation.
- Rolling Stone magazine goes digital – for a price
- Rollingstone.com has announced that on Monday the magazine will launch a new website that will give paying online readers access to complete digital replicas of all its print issues since 1967.
- CNN's Larry King and wife file for divorce
- Larry King has filed for divorce, shortly before his seventh wife also sought to end the couple's nearly 13-year marriage.
- Journalists to boycott Cannes lineup unveiling
- Some of the world's largest news agencies will boycott Thursday's Cannes Film Festival press conference to protest restrictions that organizers have placed on video coverage of this year's event.
- Halifax paper told to ID online commenters
- A court has ordered a Halifax weekly newspaper to release information that could identify seven anonymous online commenters.
- Restrict foreign control of telecoms to 49%: CRTC
- Canada's federal regulator has come out strongly against foreign control of the country's telecom sector, saying doing so risks turning Canada's communications industry into a "branch plant."