Top stories on MediaGuardian
BSkyB has too much power over rivals, Competition Commission rulesCompetition regulator's report states that several factors have resulted in the broadcaster being too dominant in pay-TV market
Rupert Murdoch could back Boris Johnson to take over as Tory leader
Media tycoon flies into London to be VIP guest of mayor at Aquatic Centre after praising 'brilliantly organised' Olympics
Rebekah Brooks charged over phone hacking allegations
Former News International chief executive formally charged over alleged phone hacking and will appear in court next month
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Today's headlines
The GuardianRupert Murdoch may back Boris Johnson to take over Tory leadership. P11
Blue Peter host joins exodus of stars from Twitter after abuse by trolls. P14
Facebook admits 83m of its profiles are bogus. P15
Simon Fox resigns as boss of troubled HMV. P27
Sony plunges deeper into red as TV sales fall. P30
Diary: Elisabeth Murdoch applies to build gatekeeper's lodge. P33
The Independent
One in 12 Facebook accounts 'fake'. P21
HMV boss quits. P47
Virgin and BT fury at premium movie ruling. P48
i
Olympics presenter Helen Skelton quits Twitter over criticism. P11
HMV boss quits. P42
BT and Virgin face pay-movie blow as watchdog clears BSkyB. P48
Trinity Mirror profits up amid pension row. P48
Daily Telegraph
Daily Telegraph defence editor Sir John Keegan dies. P9
Laddish TV ads turn off men at home with the family. P14
Leader: Sir John Keegan, a great correspondent. P19
Obituary: Sir John Keegan. P21
Trinity Mirror ups forecast for 2012. P24
HMV boss leaves. P25
Sky film rights cleared. P25
The Times
BBC put its bias review in friendly hands. P22
HMV boss leaves. P45
Time Out ditches cover price. P45
Pay-TV ruling allows BSkyB to strike movie deals. P49
Financial Times
BSkyB not stifling competition on films, watchdog says. P4
London's Time Out to switch to free distribution. P4
HMV chief executive to step down. P15
Fox's HMV shows survival is not just of the fittest. P16
Vivendi pauses $8bn Activision stake sale. P19
Mirror share jump as cost cuts bear fruit. P21
Wall Street Journal Europe
Fidelity's about-face on Facebook. P20
Social media used as recruiting tool in China. P20
Daily Mail
The red button channels with only 3,000 viewers. P8
Reporter held over assault at Olympic games. P11
TV girls clash over call for a 'his and hers' BBC prize. P13
10% of accounts are fake on Facebook. P32
Daybreak's Kate Garraway's dream turns sour. P41
Daily Express
TV review of BBC's Olympics coverage. P5
The Sun
Facebook has 83 million fake users. P17
Daily Mirror
George Lineker Twitter troll was 'bored or drunk'. P8
Daily Star
Big Brother coverage. P23
And finally ...
Jeremy Hunt has not had the finest of years. First the entrails of his relations with a News Corp lobbyist were laid bare at the Leveson inquiry. Then came his now-infamous 'bell end' blunder on the eve of the London 2012 games. Now the culture secretary has found himself out of pocket with Olympics tickets for the closing ceremony. Olympics organisers Locog made Hunt pay £2,400 for the prestigious tickets, according to the Daily Telegraph. Hunt said: "I said I'll take seats between £20 and £600 and I got four for £600 each. I thought to myself, the bastards have got me." Daily Telegraph, P6.