Learn how online retailers are using geolocation to help identify fraudulent online activity
Google Analytics and Urchin Software from Google. All the Web analytics you'll need
WPP boss Martin Sorrell has dropped a libel action against two employees he claimed had used an anonymous blog to slur his character, instead opting to settle for £120,000.
Marco Benatti and Marco Tinelli, heads of a WPP Italian subsidiary, were alleged to have likened Sorrell to a Godfather-type mafia boss and published "grossly offensive" images of the advertising chief and an ex-lover.
Sorrell had described the blog as "vindictive" and "vengeful" after learning it had cast him as a "Don Martino" figure, linked to "fraud, deception and money-laundering" last March 20.
Under pressure, the blog was closed down three days later, but copycat journals and emails soon appeared, criticising Sorrell's hands-on management style. Sorrell was due to present a paper trail he claimed would link the pair to the claims.
But, ten days into a defamation hearing at London's High Court, the plug was pulled on the action after both sides agreed a settlement in which Benatti and Tinelli accept no wrongdoing.
In a statement, they said they were not responsible for the blog but agreed the accusations it contained were false.