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Associated Press

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromAP News)
American not-for-profit news agency
Not to be confused withAustralian Associated Press orAssociated Press of Pakistan.

The Associated Press
Company typeNot-for-profitcooperative[1]
IndustryNews media
FoundedMay 22, 1846; 178 years ago (1846-05-22)[2]
Headquarters
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
ProductsWire service
RevenueDecreaseUS$510.135 million (2017)[3]
Decrease US$-73.966 million (2017)[3]
Number of employees
3,300
Website

The Associated Press (AP)[4] is an Americannot-for-profitnews agency headquartered inNew York City.Founded in 1846, it operates ascooperative,unincorporated association, and produces news reports that are distributed to its members, major U.S. daily newspapers and radio and television broadcasters. Since the award was established in 1917, the AP has earned 59Pulitzer Prizes, including 36 for photography. The AP is also known for its widely usedAP Stylebook, itsAP polls trackingNCAA sports, sponsoring theNational Football League's annual awards, and its election polls and results duringUS elections.

By 2016, news collected by the AP was published and republished by more than 1,300 newspapers and broadcasters.[5] The AP operates 235news bureaus in 94 countries, and publishes in English, Spanish, and Arabic.[6] It also operates the AP Radio Network, which provides twice hourly newscasts and daily sportscasts for broadcast and satellite radio and television stations. Many newspapers and broadcasters outside the United States are AP subscribers, paying a fee to use AP material without being contributing members of the cooperative. As part of their cooperative agreement with the AP, most member news organizations grant automatic permission for the AP to distribute theirlocal news reports.

History

[edit]
Logo on the former AP building in New York City
Further information:Telegraph in United States history § Newspaper users

The Associated Press was formed in May 1846 by five daily newspapers inNew York City to share the cost of transmitting news of theMexican–American War.[7] The venture was organized byMoses Yale Beach (1800–68), second publisher ofThe Sun, joined by theNew York Herald, theNew York Courier and Enquirer,The Journal of Commerce, and theNew York Evening Express.[8][9] Some historians[10] believe that theNew-York Tribune joined at this time; documents show it was a member in 1849.The New York Times became a member in September 1851.

Initially known as the New York Associated Press (NYAP), the organization faced competition from the Western Associated Press (1862), which criticized its monopolistic news gathering andprice setting practices. An investigation completed in 1892 byVictor Lawson, editor and publisher of theChicago Daily News, revealed that several principals of the NYAP had entered into a secret agreement with United Press, a rival organization, to share NYAP news and the profits of reselling it. The revelations led to the demise of the NYAP and in December 1892, the Western Associated Press was incorporated in Illinois as the Associated Press. A 1900Illinois Supreme Court decision (Inter Ocean Publishing Co. v. Associated Press) holding that the AP was apublic utility and operating inrestraint of trade resulted in the AP's move from Chicago to New York City, where corporation laws were more favorable to cooperatives.[11]

Melville Stone, who had founded theChicago Daily News in 1875, served as AP general manager from 1893 to 1921. The AP adopted teletype for its New York service in 1914.[12] The cooperative grew rapidly under the leadership of Kent Cooper, who served from 1925 to 1948 and who built up bureau staff in South America, Europe and (afterWorld War II), the Middle East. Under Kent Cooper, the AP became a more prevalent member of a press agency cartel made up ofReuters andHavas (nowAgence France-Presse). He lobbied for the renegotiation of the tripartite contract binding the agencies and their respective news markets at the League of Nations in 1927, attempting to give the AP a more important place in competition with Reuters.[13] In 1935, the AP launched theWirephoto network, which allowed transmission of news photographs over leased private telephone lines on the day they were taken. This gave the AP a major advantage over other news media outlets. While the first network was only between New York, Chicago, and San Francisco, eventually the AP had its network across the whole United States.[14]

In 1945, theSupreme Court of the United States held inAssociated Press v. United States[15] that the AP had been violating theSherman Antitrust Act by prohibiting member newspapers from selling or providing news to nonmember organizations as well as making it very difficult for nonmember newspapers to join the AP.[16]

The AP entered the broadcast field in 1941 when it began distributing news to radio stations; it created its own radio network in 1974. In 1994, it established APTV, a global video newsgathering agency. APTV merged with Worldwide Television News in 1998 to formAPTN, which provides video to international broadcasters and websites. In 2004, the AP moved its headquarters from its long time home at50 Rockefeller Plaza to450 West 33rd Street in Manhattan. In 2019, AP had more than 240 bureaus globally.[17] Its mission—"to gather with economy and efficiency an accurate and impartial report of the news"—has not changed since its founding, but digital technology has made the distribution of the AP news report an interactive endeavor between the AP and its 1,400 U.S. newspaper members as well as broadcasters, international subscribers, and online customers.[citation needed]

The AP began diversifying its news gathering capabilities. By 2007 the AP was generating only about 30% of its revenue from United States newspapers, and by 2024, this had declined to 10%.[18] 37% came from the global broadcast customers, 15% from online ventures and 18% came from international newspapers and from photography.[19]

In March 2024,Gannett, the largest U.S. newspaper publisher as measured by total daily circulation, announced that effective March 25, 2024, it would no longer use content from the AP. A spokesperson for AP said that they were "shocked and disappointed" by this development.[20] Newspaper chainMcClatchy announced that it would also stop using some AP services. Gannett and McClatchy will both continue to use AP's election results data.[18]

In 2024,AllSides, a company that rates news outlets' political bias on a five point scale ranging from left to right, changed their rating of the Associated Press on their Media Bias Chart from "Leans Left" to "Left". The AP had been rated "Leans Left" from 2022-2023. From 2016-2021 the Associated Press was rated as "Center".[21]

Web resources

[edit]

The AP's multi-topic structure has resulted in web portals such asYahoo! andMSN posting its articles, often relying on the AP as their first source for news coverage of breaking news items. This and the constant updating evolving stories require has had a major impact on the AP's public image and role, giving new credence to the AP's ongoing mission of having staff for covering every area of news fully and promptly. In 2007, Google announced that it was paying to receive AP content, to be displayed inGoogle News,[22] interrupted from late 2009 to mid-2010 due to a licensing dispute.[23][24]

A 2017 study byNewsWhip revealed that AP content was more engaged with onFacebook than content from any individual English-language publisher.[25]

Nonprofit

[edit]

In June 2024,Axios reported that the AP would be launching a nonprofit with the goal of expanding state and local news, hoping to raise $100 million.[26]

Timeline

[edit]
  • 1849: The Harbor News Association opened the firstnews bureau outside the United States inHalifax, Nova Scotia, to meet ships sailing from Europe before they reached dock in New York.
  • 1876:Mark Kellogg, astringer, was the first APnews correspondent to be killed while reporting the news, at theBattle of the Little Bighorn.
  • 1893:Melville E. Stone became the general manager of the reorganized the AP, a post he held until 1921. Under his leadership, the AP grew to be one of the world's most prominent news agencies.
  • 1899: The AP usedGuglielmo Marconi's wirelesstelegraph to cover theAmerica's Cup yacht race offSandy Hook, New Jersey, the first news test of the new technology.
  • 1914: The AP introduced theteleprinter, which transmitted directly to printers over telegraph wires. Eventually a worldwide network of 60-word-per-minute teleprinter machines is built.
  • 1935: The AP initiatedWirePhoto, the world's first wire service for photographs. The first photograph to transfer over the network depicted an airplane crash inMorehouse, New York, onNew Year's Day, 1935.
  • 1938: The AP expanded new offices at50 Rockefeller Plaza (known as "50 Rock") under an agreement made as part of theconstruction of Rockefeller Center in New York City. The building would remain its headquarters for 66 years.[27]
  • 1941: The AP expanded from print to radio broadcast news.
  • 1941: Wide World News Photo Service purchased fromThe New York Times.[28][29]
  • 1943: The AP sendsRuth Cowan Nash to cover the deployment of theWomen's Army Auxiliary Corps toAlgeria. Nash is the first American woman war correspondent.[30]
  • 1945: APwar correspondentJoseph Morton was executed along with nineOSS men and four BritishSOE agents by the Germans atMauthausen concentration camp. Morton was the onlyAllied correspondent to be executed by theAxis duringWorld War II. That same year, APParis bureau chiefEdward Kennedy defied an Allied headquartersnews blackout to reportNazi Germany's surrender, touching off a bitter episode that led to his eventual dismissal by the AP. Kennedy maintains that he reported only what German radio already had broadcast.
  • 1951: AP war correspondentPrague bureau chiefWilliam N. Oatis was arrested forespionage by the Communist government ofCzechoslovakia. He was not released until 1953.
  • 1974: The AP launches the Associated Press Radio Network headquartered in Washington, D.C.
  • 1987: The AP switches to color photography completely after the public suicide of American politicianR. Budd Dwyer.[31]
  • 1994: The AP launchesAPTV, a global video news gathering agency, headquartered in London.
  • 2004: The AP moves its headquarters from 50 Rock to 450 West 33rd Street, New York City.[27]
  • 2006: The AP joinsYouTube.
  • 2008: The AP launched AP Mobile (initially known as the AP Mobile News Network), a multimedia news portal that gives users news they can choose and provides anytime access to international, national and local news. The AP was the first to debut a dedicated iPhone application in June 2008 on stage at Apple's WWDC event. The app offered AP's own worldwide coverage ofbreaking news, sports, entertainment, politics and business as well as content from more than 1,000 AP members andthird-party sources.[32]
  • 2008: The AP opens its Pyongyang bureau.[33]
  • 2010: The AP launched multi-device World Cup Soccer Applications providing real-time news coverage of the 2010 World Cup on desktop, Apple and Android devices.
  • 2010: AP earnings fall 65% from 2008 to just $8.8 million. The AP also announced that it would have posted a loss of $4.4 million had it not liquidated its German-language news service for $13.2 million.[34]
  • 2011: AP revenue dropped $14.7 million in 2010. 2010 revenue totaled $631 million, a decline of 7% from the previous year. The AP rolled out price cuts designed to help newspapers and broadcasters cope with declining revenue.[35]
  • 2012:Gary B. Pruitt succeededTom Curley to become president and CEO. Pruitt is the 13th leader of the AP in its 166-year history.[36]
  • 2016: The AP reported that income dropped to $1.6 million from $183.6 million in 2015. The 2015 profit figure was bolstered by a one-time, $165 million tax benefit.[37]
  • 2017: The AP moved its headquarters to200 Liberty Street, New York City.
  • 2018: The AP unveiled AP Votecast to replaceexit polls for the 2018 US midterm elections.[38]

Governance

[edit]

The AP is governed by an electedboard of directors.[39] Since April 2022, the chairperson isGracia C. Martore, former president and CEO ofTegna, Inc.[40]

Conditions of reporting

[edit]

With its more than 100 regional offices, AP also reports from countries where press freedom is restricted, sometimes under adverse circumstances.

Within the US, restrictions were imposed by thesecond Trump administration.[41] In February 2025, two AP reporters were barred from covering several events at the White House, because of the AP's refusal to refer to theGulf of Mexico as the "Gulf of America,” as directed by the White House.[42][43][44] On February 21, 2025, the AP sued the Trump administration inAssociated Press v. Budowich for blocking their attendance.[45][46][47]

On February 24, 2025, a federal judge declined to issue an immediate order compelling the White House to reinstate the AP's access to presidential events, although he encouraged the White House to do so. Following the decision, the White House released a statement asserting that "the ability to pose questions to the President of the United States in the Oval Office and aboardAir Force One constitutes a privilege extended to journalists, rather than a legally enshrined right."[48][49][50]

Election polls

[edit]

The AP is the only organization that collects and verifies election results in every city and county across the United States, including races for the U.S. president, the Senate and House of Representatives, and governors as well as other statewide offices.[51] Known for accuracy, the organization has collected and published presidential election data since 1848.[52] Major news outlets rely on the polling data and results provided by the Associated Press before declaring a winner in major political races, particularly the presidential election.[53]

In declaring the winners, the AP has historically relied on a robust network of local reporters with first-hand knowledge of assigned territories who also have long-standing relationships with county clerks as well as other local officials. Moreover, the AP monitors and gathers data from county websites and electronic feeds provided by states. The research team further verifies the results by considering demographics, number of absentee ballots, and other political issues that may have an effect on the final results.[51] In 2018, the AP introduced a new system calledAP VoteCast, which was developed together withNORC at the University of Chicago in order to further improve the reliability of its data and overcome biases of its legacyexit poll.[54]

Sports polls

[edit]
Main article:AP Poll

The AP conducts polls for numerouscollege sports in theUnited States. The AP college football rankings were created in 1936, and began including the top 25 teams in 1989. Since 1969, the final poll of each season has been released after all bowl games have been played.[55] The AP released its all-time Top 25 in 2016.[56] As of 2017[update], 22 different programs had finished in the number one spot of the poll since its inception.[57] In the pre-bowl game determination era, the AP poll was often used as the distinction for a national champion in football.

The AP college basketball poll has been used as a guide for which teams deserve national attention. The AP first began its poll of college basketball teams in 1949, and has since conducted over 1,100 polls. The college basketball poll started with 20 teams and was reduced to 10 during the 1960–61 college basketball season. It returned to 20 teams in 1968–69 and expanded to 25 beginning in 1989–90. The final poll for each season is released prior to the conclusion of theNCAA tournament, so all data includes regular season games only. In 2017, The AP released a list of the Top 100 teams of all time. The poll counted poll appearances (one point) and No. 1 rankings (two points) to rank each team.[58]

Sports awards

[edit]

Baseball

[edit]

The AP began itsMajor League Baseball Manager of the Year Award in 1959, for a manager in each league.[59] From 1984 to 2000, the award was given to one manager in all of MLB.[60] The winners were chosen by a national panel of AP baseball writers and radio men. The award was discontinued in 2001.[59]

Basketball

[edit]

Every year, the AP releases the names of the winners of itsAP College Basketball Player of the Year andAP College Basketball Coach of the Year awards. It also honors a group ofAll-American players.

Football

[edit]

Associated Press Television News

[edit]
Main article:Associated Press Television News
The APTN Building in London

In 1994, London-based Associated Press Television (APTV) was founded to provide agency news material to television broadcasters.[61] In 1998, the AP purchased Worldwide Television News (WTN) from the ABC News division ofThe Walt Disney Company, Nine Network Australia and ITN London.[61] The AP publishes 70,000 videos and 6,000 hours of live video per year, as of 2016[update]. The agency also provides seven simultaneous live video channels, AP Direct for broadcasters, and six[62] live channels on AP Live Choice for broadcasters and digital publishers. The AP was the first news agency to launch a live video news service in 2003.[63]

AP Stylebook

[edit]
These paragraphs are an excerpt fromAP Stylebook.[edit]

The Associated Press Stylebook (generally called theAP Stylebook), alternatively titledThe Associated Press Stylebook and Briefing on Media Law, is astyle and usage guide for AmericanEnglish grammar created by Americanjournalists working for or connected with the Associated Press journalism cooperative based inNew York City. TheStylebook offers a basic reference to American English grammar, punctuation, and principles of reporting, including many definitions and rules for usage as well as styles forcapitalization,abbreviation,spelling, and numerals.

The first publicly available edition of the book was published in 1953. The first modern edition was published in August 1977 byLorenz Press. Afterwards, various paperback editions were published by different publishers, including, among others, Turtleback Books,Penguin's Laurel Press,Pearson'sAddison-Wesley, andHachette'sPerseus Books andBasic Books. Recent editions are released in several formats, includingpaperback and flat-lyingspiral-bound editions, as well as a digitale-book edition and an online subscription version. Additionally, theAP Stylebook also provides English grammar recommendations through social media, includingTwitter,[64]Facebook,[65]Pinterest,[66] andInstagram.[67]

From 1977 to 2005, more than two million copies of theAP Stylebook have been sold worldwide, with that number climbing to 2.5 million by 2011.[68][69] Writers inbroadcasting, news, magazine publishing, marketing departments andpublic relations firms traditionally adopt and apply AP grammar and punctuation styles.

Litigation and controversies

[edit]
This article's"criticism" or "controversy" sectionmay compromise the article'sneutrality. Please help rewrite or integrate negative information to other sectionsthrough discussion on thetalk page.(September 2022)

AP collaboration with Nazi Germany

[edit]
Further information:Collaboration with Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy § Business collaboration, andReich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda

The APcollaborated withNazi Germany and gave to it access to its photographic archives for itsantisemiticNazi propaganda.[70][71] AP also cooperated with the Nazi regimethrough censorship.[72][70]

In 2017, the German historian Norman Domeier of theUniversity of Vienna brought to wider attention the deal between the AP and theNazi government related to the interchange of press photos during the period in whichthe United States was at war with Nazi Germany.[73] This relationship involved the Bureau Laux, run by theWaffen-SS photographerHelmut Laux.[73][74]

The mechanism for this interchange involved a courier flying toLisbon and back each day transporting photos from and for Nazi Germany's wartime enemy, the United States, viadiplomatic pouch. The transactions were initially conducted at the AP bureau under Luiz Lupi in Lisbon, and from 1944, when the exchange via Lisbon took too long, also at the AP bureau inStockholm under Eddie Shanke. Here, as a cover, the Swedish agency,Pressens Bild [sv], was involved as an intermediary. An estimated 40,000 photos were exchanged between the enemies in this way.[75] The AP was kicked out of Nazi Germany whenthe United States entered World War II in December 1941.[74]

Israeli–Palestinian conflict

[edit]

In his bookBroken Spring: An American-Israeli Reporter's Close-up View of How Egyptians Lost Their Struggle for Freedom, former AP correspondentMark Lavie claimed that the editorial line of the Cairo bureau was that the conflict was Israel's fault and the Arabs and Palestinians were blameless.[76][77][78] Israeli journalistMatti Friedman accused the AP of killing a story he wrote about the "war of words", "between Israel and its critics in human rights organizations", in the aftermath of theIsrael/Gaza conflict of 2008–09.[76]

Tuvia Grossman photograph

[edit]

On September 29, 2000, the first day of theSecond Intifada, the AP published a photograph of a badly bloodied young man behind whom a police officer could be seen with a baton raised in a menacing fashion; a gas station with Hebrew lettering could also be seen in the background.[79][80][81] The AP labelled it with the caption "An Israeli policeman and a Palestinian on the Temple Mount", and the picture and caption were subsequently published in several major American newspapers, including theNew York Times.[82][79][81] In reality, the injured man in the photograph was a Jewish yeshiva student from Chicago namedTuvia Grossman, and the police officer, a Druze named Gidon Tzefadi, was protecting Grossman from a Palestinian mob who had clubbed, stoned, and stabbed Grossman.[82][79] There are also no gas stations with Hebrew lettering on the Temple Mount.[79][80][81][83]

The episode is often cited by those who accuse the media of having an anti-Israel bias, and was the impetus for the founding ofHonestReporting.[83][84][85][86] After a letter from Grossman's father noted the error, the AP, the New York Times, and other papers published corrections; despite these corrections, the photograph continues to be used by critics of Israel as a symbol of Israeli aggression and violence.[79][81][83][87]

Israeli airstrike on the AP office building

[edit]

During the2021 Israel–Palestine crisis, the Israeli armydestroyed the al-Jalaa Highrise, a building housing the AP's Gaza offices andAl Jazeera offices. Israel stated that the building housedHamas military intelligence and had given advanced warning of the strike, and no civilians were harmed.[88][89] AP CEO Gary Pruitt released a statement on May 16, stating that he "had no indication Hamas was in the building" and called on the Israeli government to provide the evidence. He said that "the world will know less about what is happening in Gaza because of what happened today."[90]

On 17 May,US secretary of stateAntony Blinken said he had not seen any evidence that Hamas operated from the building housing the AP and Al Jazeera, but it is the job of others to handle intelligence matters. Israel reportedly shared intelligence with American officials and U.S. presidentJoe Biden showing Hamas offices inside the building.[91]

Reporters Without Borders asked theInternational Criminal Court to investigate the bombing as a possiblewar crime.[92]

On June 8, Israeli Ambassador to the USGilad Erdan met with AP CEO Gary Pruitt and vice president for foreign news, Ian Phillips, to discuss the operation. In coordination with the IDF, Erdan said the site was used by Hamas intelligence officials to develop and carry out electronic warfare operations,[93] and that IDF did not suspect the AP was aware of the alleged covert Hamas presence. After the meeting the AP stated "We have yet to receive evidence to support these claims".[94] Erdan later tweeted "Israel is willing to assist AP in rebuilding its offices and operations in Gaza."[94]

Firing of Emily Wilder

[edit]

In May 2021, the AP said it would launch a review of its social media policies after questions were raised about the firing of a journalist who expressed pro-Palestinian views on social media. The announcement came after some AP journalists signed a letter expressing concern over the termination of former news associate Emily Wilder, whom the AP said committed multiple violations of the company'ssocial media policy. The AP has said that Wilder's previous activism played no role in her termination.[95]

Removal of Israel-Palestine Livestream

[edit]

In May 2024, Israeli officials seized equipment broadcasting a live stream of Northern Gaza from the town ofSderot as part of a ban onAl Jazeera Media in Israel which had received footage from the broadcast. The move was condemned by multiple journalism organizations, Israeli opposition politicians, and US government officials. In a press briefing, the spokesperson for theNational Security Council commented on the seizure, saying "The White House and the State Department immediately engaged with the government of Israel at high levels to express our serious concern and ask them to reverse this action."[96] Later that day, Israeli Communication MinisterShlomo Karhi announced via Twitter that the equipment would be returned to the AP and the Israeli Government would review the positioning of the AP broadcast to determine if it posed a security risk.[97]

Kidnapping of Tina Susman

[edit]

In 1994,Tina Susman was on her fourth trip toSomalia, reporting for the AP. She was reporting on U.S.peacekeeping troops leaving the country. Somali rebels outnumbered her bodyguards inMogadishu,[98] dragged her from her car in broad daylight,[99] and held her for 20 days. She toldThe Quill that she believes being a woman was an advantage in her experience there.[100] The AP had requested news organizations includingThe New York Times, theChicago Tribune, andThe Washington Post to suppress the story to discourage the emboldening of the kidnappers.[99][101]

Christopher Newton

[edit]

In September 2002,Washington, D.C. bureau reporter Christopher Newton, an AP reporter since 1994, was fired after he was accused of fabricating sources since 2000, including at least 40 people and organizations. Prior to his firing, Newton had been focused on writing about federal law-enforcement while based at theJustice Department. Some of the nonexistent agencies quoted in his stories included "Education Alliance", the "Institute for Crime and Punishment in Chicago", "Voice for the Disabled", and "People for Civil Rights".[102]

FBI impersonation case

[edit]

In 2007, anFBI agent working in Seattle impersonated an AP journalist and infected the computer of a 15-year-old suspect with a malicious surveillance software.[103][104] The incident sparked a strongly worded statement from the AP demanding the bureau never impersonate a member of the news media again.[105] In September 2016 the incident resulted in a report by the Justice Department, which the AP said "effectively condone[d] the FBI's impersonation".[106][107] In December 2017, following a US court appearance, a judge ruled in favor of the AP in a lawsuit against the FBI for fraudulently impersonating a member of the news media in conjunction with the 2007 case.[108][109]

Fair-use controversy

[edit]

In June 2008, the AP sent numerousDMCA take-down demands and threatened legal action against severalblogs. The AP contended that the internet blogs were violating the AP'scopyright by linking to AP material and using headlines and short summaries in those links. Many bloggers and experts noted that the use of the AP news fell squarely under commonly accepted internet practices and withinfair-use standards.[110] Others noted and demonstrated that the AP routinely takes similar excerpts from other sources, often without attribution or licenses. The AP responded that it was defining standards regarding citations of AP news.[111]

Shepard Fairey

[edit]

In March 2009, the AP counter-sued artistShepard Fairey overhis famous image of Barack Obama, saying the uncredited, uncompensated use of an AP photo violatedcopyright laws and signaled a threat tojournalism. Fairey had sued the AP the previous month over his artwork, titled "Obama Hope" and "Obama Progress", arguing that he did not violate copyright law because he dramatically changed the image. The artwork, based on an April 2006 picture taken for the AP byMannie Garcia, was a popular image during the2008 presidential election and now hangs in theNational Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. According to the AP lawsuit filed in federal court in Manhattan, Fairey knowingly "misappropriated The AP's rights in that image". The suit asked the court to award the AP profits made off the image and damages. Fairey said he looked forward to "upholding thefree expression rights at stake here" and disproving the AP's accusations.[112] In January 2011 this suit was settled with neither side declaring their position to be wrong but agreeing to share reproduction rights and profits from Fairey's work.[113]

All Headline News

[edit]

In January 2008, the AP sued competitorAll Headline News (AHN) claiming that AHN allegedly infringed on its copyrights and a contentious "quasi-property" right to facts.[114][115] The AP complaint asserted that AHN reporters had copied facts from AP news reports without permission and without paying a syndication fee. After AHN moved to dismiss all but the copyright claims set forth by the AP, a majority of the lawsuit was dismissed.[116] The case has been dismissed and both parties settled.[117]

Hoax tweet and flash crash

[edit]

On April 23, 2013, hackers posted a tweet to AP'sTwitter account about fictional attacks on theWhite House, falsely claiming that PresidentObama had been injured.[118] The hoax caused aflash crash on the American stock markets, with theDow Jones Industrial Average briefly falling by 143 points.[119]

Justice Department subpoena of phone records

[edit]
Main article:2013 Department of Justice investigations of reporters

On May 13, 2013, the AP announced that telephone records for 20 of their reporters during a two-month period in 2012 had beensubpoenaed by theU.S. Justice Department and described these acts as a "massive and unprecedented intrusion" into news-gathering operations.[120][121] The AP reported that the Justice Department would not say why it sought the records, but sources stated that theUnited States Attorney for the District of Columbia's office was conducting a criminal investigation into a May 7, 2012 AP story about aCIA operation that prevented a terrorist plot to detonate an explosive device on a commercial flight.[122] The DOJ did not direct subpoenas to the AP, instead going to their phone providers, includingVerizon Wireless.[123]U.S. Attorney GeneralEric Holder testified under oath in front of the House Judiciary Committee that he recused himself from the leak investigations to avoid any appearance of a conflict of interest. Holder said his Deputy Attorney General,James M. Cole, was in charge of the AP investigation and would have ordered the subpoenas.[124]

Migrant Boat NFT

[edit]

On January 10, 2022, AP announced it would start sellingnon-fungible tokens (NFTs) of their photographs in partnership with a company named Xooa, with the proceeds being used to fund their operations.[125] One of the NFTs they promoted on Twitter on 24 February was an aerial shot depicting an overcrowded migrant boat in theMediterranean Sea. The tweet received negative backlash from users and other journalists, with AP being accused of profiting off of human suffering and the picture choice being "dystopian" and "in extremely poor taste". The tweet was subsequently deleted and the NFT, which was to be sold the next day, was pulled from market. Global director of media relations Lauren Easton apologized, saying "This was a poor choice of imagery for an NFT. It has not and will not be put up for auction [...] AP's NFT marketplace is a very early pilot program, and we are immediately reviewing our efforts".[126][127] No further NFTs were announced or sold.

Awards received

[edit]

The AP has earned 59Pulitzer Prizes, including 36 for photography, since the award was established in 1917.[128] In May 2020,Dar Yasin,Mukhtar Khan, andChanni Anand of the AP were honored with the 2020Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography.[129] The choice caused controversy,[130][131][132] because it was taken by some as questioning "India's legitimacy over Kashmir" as it had used the word "independence" in regard torevocation of Article 370.[133]

The AP won an Oscar[134] in 2024 for20 Days in Mariupol, a first-person account[135] of the early days of Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^"Leadership Team". Associated Press.Archived from the original on March 14, 2012. RetrievedOctober 1, 2021.
  2. ^"Documents Shed New Light on Birth of AP; Wire Older Than Originally Thought".Editor & Publisher. January 31, 2006. Archived fromthe original on July 28, 2018. RetrievedJuly 27, 2018.
  3. ^ab"Consolidated Financial Statements"(PDF). Associated Press. April 2015.Archived(PDF) from the original on June 15, 2016. RetrievedJune 2, 2016.
  4. ^"Associated Press, The".AP Stylebook. The Associated Press.Archived from the original on May 6, 2024. RetrievedOctober 24, 2023.
  5. ^"2016 Consolidated Financial Statements"(PDF).Associated Press. April 5, 2017.Archived(PDF) from the original on March 4, 2018. RetrievedMarch 4, 2018.
  6. ^"AP by the Numbers".Associated Press.Archived from the original on March 21, 2024. RetrievedMarch 21, 2024.
  7. ^"Network effects".The Economist.Archived from the original on February 21, 2018. RetrievedFebruary 20, 2018.
  8. ^Beach, Stanley,Archives at Yale, Stanley Yale Beach papersArchived March 31, 2023, at theWayback Machine, Number: GEN MSS 802, 1911–1948
  9. ^Press, Gil."The Birth of Atari, Modern Computer Design, And The Software Industry: This Week In Tech History".Forbes.Archived from the original on February 21, 2018. RetrievedFebruary 20, 2018.
  10. ^Schwarzlose, Richard Allen (1989).The Nation's Newsbrokers: The formative years, from pretelegraphs to 1865. Northwestern University Press. p. 93.ISBN 978-0-8101-0818-9.Archived from the original on January 4, 2019. RetrievedJanuary 4, 2019.
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Sources

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Blanchard, Margaret A. "The Associated Press antitrust suit: A philosophical clash over ownership of first amendment rights."Business History Review 61.1 (1987): 43–85.
  • Blondheim, Menahem.News over the Wires: The Telegraph and the Flow of Public Information in America, 1844–1897 (Harvard U. Press, 1994).
  • Blondheim, Menahem. "The click: Telegraphic technology, journalism, and the transformations of the New York Associated Press."American Journalism 17.4 (2000): 27–52.
  • Coopersmith, Jonathan. "From lemons to lemonade: The development of AP Wirephoto."American Journalism 17.4 (2000): 55–72.
  • Dell'Orto, Giovanna.AP foreign correspondents in action: World War II to the present (Cambridge University Press, 2016)online.
  • Halberstam, David.Breaking news: how the Associated Press has covered war, peace, and everything else (Princeton Architectural Press, 2007)online.
  • Kirat, Mohamed, and David Weaver. "Foreign news coverage in three wire services: A study of AP, UPI, and the nonaligned news agencies pool."Gazette (Leiden, Netherlands) 35.1 (1985): 31–47.
  • Rantanen, Terhi. "Foreign dependence and domestic monopoly: The European news cartel and US associated presses, 1861–1932."Media History 12.1 (2006): 19–35.
  • Renaud, Jean-Luc. "US government assistance to AP's world-wide expansion."Journalism Quarterly 62.1 (1985): 10–36.
  • Seo, Soomin. "Blue-Collar witnesses to power: The culture of photographers at the Associated Press."Journalism Studies 20.15 (2019): 2200–2217.online
  • Smethers, J. Steven. "Pounding Brass for the Associated Press: Delivering News by Telegraph in a Pre-Teletype Era."American Journalism 19.2 (2002): 13–30.
  • Watts, Liz. "AP's first female reporters."Journalism History 39.1 (2013): 15–28.online

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