Rupert Murdoch's media empire has apologized and agreed to cash payouts to 37 people - including a movie star, a football player, a top British politician and the son of a serial killer - who were harassed and phone-hacked by his tabloid press.
One of the enduring echoes of the Murdoch affair in the United Kingdom arises from the extent to which politicians had become "too cosy" with the media. Too cosy is a euphemism: it's code for a relationship in which influence may have been peddled. I'll scratch your back if you scratch mine.
News International asked to delete a large number of emails from its system on nine different occasions in the past 15 months, a technology firm told British lawmakers probing phone hacking allegations.
Rupert Murdoch's British newspapers are set to lose exclusive access to British athletes ahead of the 2012 London Olympics after the phone hacking scandal that led to the News of the World's closure.
Prime Minister David Cameron has dragged his political foes into Britain's phone-hacking scandal at a raucous session of Parliament, distancing himself from a former aide at the heart of the allegations and denying his staff tried to thwart police investigations.
Her husband was in the hot seat, but Wendi Deng has emerged as the unlikely star of a British hearing into phone hacking at Rupert Murdoch's newspapers.
Dunedin television production company NHNZ is not anticipating any fallout in the wake of the News Corporation scandal unfolding in the United Kingdom.
The only sort of power a news organisation can wield safely is the power to persuade.
A protester splattered Rupert Murdoch with white foam in a drama-filled hearing this morning, during which which the media baron told British lawmakers he was not responsible for a phone hacking scandal that has rocked his global empire.
As more details emerge in the British phone hacking scandal, a group of internet hackers have added a twist to proceedings by tampering with the website of Rupert Murdoch's Sun newspaper.
News Corp board member Thomas Perkins says embattled Chief Executive Rupert Murdoch has the full support of the company's board of directors, and is not considering elevating a senior executive to replace him amid a phone-hacking scandal in Britain.
Police say Sean Hoare, the whistleblower reporter who alleged widespread hacking at the News of the World, has been found dead.
Britain's tabloid phone-hacking scandal has enveloped the London police force with the rapid-fire resignations of two top officers and claims of possible illegal eavesdropping, bribery and collusion.
Rupert Murdoch will face the fury of members of Parliament this week as the intensifying voicemail hacking and police bribery scandal cuts deeper into his media empire with the arrest of his former British newspaper chief and the resignation of London's police commissioner.
Britain's Conservative-led government has denied it was too close to Rupert Murdoch's scandal-hit media empire, as the mogul apologised for phone hacking by one of his tabloids in full-page newspaper ads across the country.
Rupert Murdoch has accepted the resignations of The Wall Street Journal's publisher and the chief of his British operations as the once-defiant media mogul struggled to control an escalating phone hacking scandal, offering apologies to the public and the family of a murdered schoolgirl.
The FBI has opened an investigation into allegations that media mogul Rupert Murdoch's News Corp sought to hack into the phones of September 11 victims.
Rupert Murdoch's dream of controlling a British broadcasting behemoth has evaporated with the withdrawal of his bid for BSkyB - the latest, biggest casualty of what Prime Minister David Cameron called the hacking "firestorm" sweeping through British politics, media and police.
The scandal engulfing Rupert Murdoch's media empire has exploded in several directions, with fresh reports of phone hacking attacks against some of the nation's most powerful figures, including royals and former prime minister Gordon Brown.
Rupert Murdoch has touched down in London to take charge of his media empire's phone-hacking crisis as his best-selling Sunday tabloid, the News of the World, published its last. The scandal lives on despite his sacrifice of the 168-year-old paper at the heart of it.