Front pages of Australian newspapers are displayed featuring stories about Facebook in Sydney. In a surprise retaliatory move Thursday, Facebook blocked Australians from sharing ne...
AP/PTI
A street vendor reads a newspaper as he sells newspapers at a roadside stall in New Delhi.
Photo by Mohsin Javed/Outlook
A man reads a Malayalam language newspaper that has the demise of Diego Maradona as the lead news in Kochi. Maradona, the Argentine soccer great who scored the “Hand of God” go...
AP Photo/R S Iyer
A rickshaw driver reads a newspaper while waiting for passengers at a market in Lucknow.
AP Photo/Rajesh Kumar Singh
Media reports of US President Donald Trump and his wife Melania testing positive for COVID-19 are seen in local and national newspapers in a book stall in Guwahati.
AP Photo/Anupam Nath
A man reads a newspapers with reports of US President Donald Trump and his wife Melania testing positive for COVID-19 in Guwahati.
AP Photo/Anupam Nath
Newspaper front page headlines, a day after Prime Minister Narendra Modi laid the foundation for the construction fo Ram Temple in Ayodhya, in New Delhi.
PTI Photo/Manvender Vashist
A vendor arranges newspapers on a pavement, in New Delhi. Newspapers across the country have published news of foundation laying ceremony of Ram Temple prominently.
PTI Photo/Kamal Kishore
A man wearing a mask reads a newspaper at a bus terminus which has been shut down for more than a month as part of measures to curb the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic in Kochi, Ke...
AP Photo/R S Iyer
Vendors maintain social distance as they sit along a road to sell newspapers during the nationwide lockdown, imposed to curb the coronavirus pandemic, in Bhubaneswar.
PTI Photo
Vendors arrange different vernacular newspaper before delivering it to customers during the nationwide lockdown amid coronavirus pandemic, at Ganeshguri in Guwahati.
PTI Photo
Copies of local newspapers fronted with headlines on Maharashtra government formation, in Mumbai.
PTI Photo/Mitesh Bhuvad
Copies of local newspapers fronted with headlines on Maharashtra government formation, in Mumbai.
PTI Photo/Mitesh Bhuvad
A man reads newspaper fronted with headlines on Maharashtra government formation, in Mumbai.
PTI Photo/Mitesh Bhuvad
People read about the verdict in a decades-old land title dispute between Muslims and Hindus in newspapers in Ayodhya.
AP Photo/Rajesh Kumar Singh
People buy newspapers to read about the verdict in a decades-old land title dispute between Muslims and Hindus in Ayodhya.
AP Photo/Rajesh Kumar Singh
Shopkeeper reads newspaper fronted with headlines on Ayodhya case verdict, in Ayodhya.
PTI Photo/Nand Kumar
A vendor stacks up copies of local newspapers fronted by with headlines on Ayodhya case verdict, in New Delhi.
PTI Photo/Arun Sharma
A local reads newspaper fronted with headlines on Ayodhya case verdict, in New Delhi.
PTI Photo/Arun Sharma
Newspapers featuring the second term of newly-elected Prime Minister Narendra Modi one day after the counting of votes for Lok Sabha elections, in New Delhi.
The HC was hearing a petition filed by the Foundation for Independent Journalism which said that the new IT Rules issued on February 25 are palpably illegal in seeking control and regulate digital news media
Media needs big bang reforms. Merely because television licences have been distributed with a free hand over the decades does not mean that the nation has to live with this corrosiveness, writes Manish Tewari.
In an interview to Outlook's Puneet Nicholas Yadav, The Telegraph editor R. Rajagopal dismisses accusations of bashing PM Modi while going soft on Mamata Banerjee and answers a host of other questions on the state of the Indian media today.
Newspapers on Saturday morning had already become stale by the time the dailies arrived at people's doorsteps as the political developments in Maharashtra took an overnight turn.
A FIR was filed on Sunday against the editor, Vishweshwar Bhat, and the editorial staff under Sections 406 (criminal breach of trust), 420 (cheating) and 499 (defamation) of the Indian Penal Code, police said Monday.
You often see it on Twitter: identical words from a mass of handles, flowing as if from a factory. In Odisha, this rare planetary alignment was seen in print. Guess who the sun is…
Living in the global village also means living with the global village idiots. We shouldn't romanticise Old Media: but democracies need news organisations.