The post Best Crypto Media for PR Campaigns in Europe: What Generic Ratings Fail to Show appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Choosing crypto media outlets in Europe sounds easier than it actually is. A PR team preparing a European campaign usually starts with a familiar process: search for the biggest crypto publications, compare traffic numbers, check a few SEO metrics, and build a shortlist from whatever appears most often across Google results. Very quickly, the process becomes unreliable. Some rankings prioritize traffic without showing audience quality. Others mix global and regional outlets without distinguishing market relevance. One publication appears dominant in SEO tools but generates weak engagement in target countries. Another has smaller visibility but strong influence inside local crypto communities. The deeper the research goes, the more fragmented the data becomes. This is the core problem with generic crypto media rankings in Europe: they reduce a highly regional and
Choosing crypto media outlets in Europe is more complex than generic rankings suggest. Learn how PR teams can evaluate European crypto publications using audience behavior, regional relevance, engagement quality, and data-driven media intelligence.
Most “top crypto media” lists rely on fragmented metrics and guesswork. Learn how PR teams can use data-driven media intelligence and customized rankings to plan smarter campaigns with OMI.
The company’s UK and Europe boss has become a lightning rod for the British public’s fear of a US tech takeover
The hall was packed with rightwing radicals when Louis Mosley heralded a coming revolution. Just as Oliver Cromwell – that “crusader for Christ and liberty” – routed King Charles I’s royalists, “a similar revolution is brewing today”, said the UK and Europe boss of Palantir. Globalism’s “twilight” was upon us, he said in a speech dotted with admiring mentions of the podcaster Joe Rogan and “Elon’s Doge”.
It was not a typical peroration for a big UK government contractor with more than £600m in deals with the NHS, the Ministry of Defence and police. But Palantir, the world’s most controversial tech company, is no typical contractor. In recent years it has gained firm footholds across Britain’s public sector while appalling critics with its leadership’s rightwing rhetoric and its work for the US and Israeli militaries and Donald Trump’s ICE immigration crackdown.
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Crypto conferences filled venues and dominated social feeds in 2025, but fresh traffic data suggests the hype barely translated into meaningful audience growth for crypto media outlets. Crypto conference season was noisy last year. The booths were full, the panels…
Learn how Outset Media Index (OMI) helps PR teams stay within budget through smarter media planning, objective benchmarking, and structured media intelligence.
Partnership between top startup DeepL and Amazon comes amid concern about Silicon Valley’s monopoly over digital infrastructure
AI companies in Europe risk losing their world-leading status in the field of machine translation, industry figures have said, after the decision by one of the continent’s leading startups to partner with Amazon’s cloud computing division provoked alarm.
While businesses in the EU have generally lagged behind the US and China in AI adoption, a small group of European companies have cornered the global market for high-quality machine translations for professional use.
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QyTw0, the Finnish AI lab founded by former AMD Silo AI CEO Peter Sarlin, is now valued at €325 million (approximately $380 million) after raising a €25 million angel round ($29 million). It's a sign of enduring tailwinds for AI, quantum computing, and sovereign tech, especially for Europe-made companies.