Here is a list of some of the press coverage from the the Reuters Digital News Report 2012
BBC News UK ‘falls behind’ in news access
BBC News
Some 75% of people in the UK read, watch or listen to a news story every day, the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism survey suggests.
Germans most hooked on to news with nine in ten accessing it …
Newstrack India
Nine out of ten Germans access news everyday, according to a survey. The Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism Survey found …
Germans buck trend with love of newspapers
Reuters
The survey was conducted by YouGov on behalf of the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at the University of Oxford. It involved a representative …
Young tablet owners more willing to pay for news
paidContent.org
Paying for online news is still a minority … in the UK, according to the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism’s new …
Social media top news source for under 25s
Telegraph.co.uk
The first Reuters Institute Digital Report has found that 43 per cent of Britons aged between 16 …
Report: More people share news by email than Twitter
Journalism.co.uk
Reuters Institute finds 55 per cent of UK respondents to its survey shared news by Facebook within the past week, 33 per cent by email, 23 per cent by Twitter.
Young tablet owners more willing to pay for news
Yahoo! Finance
… according to the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism’s new Digital News Report 2012. And only six percent of survey respondents said they would be …
Facebook Plays Key Part In How People Discover, Share News
AllFacebook
Reuters Institute also illustrated how different age groups take in news. Not surprisingly, the younger generation flocks to Facebook more often than older adults. Among those aged 16-24, 43 percent receive their news through sites like Facebook and …
In a fit of irony, young tablet owners may save the news industry
The Next Web , Alex Wilhelm
Audiences Turn To TV, Online Platforms For News
Huffington Post
Survey: Smartphones remain favorite mobile news source among young adults
Poynter Institute (Web) by Jeff Sonderman