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Online platforms ofThe New York Times

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Theonline platforms ofThe New York Times encompass the established applications, websites, and other online services developed byThe New York Times for its operations.

Website

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nytimes.com in March 2024

nytimes.com has undergone several major redesigns and infrastructure developments since its debut in January 1996.[1] In April 2006,The New York Times redesigned its website with an emphasis on multimedia.[2] In preparation forSuper Tuesday in February 2008, theTimes developed a live election system using theAssociated Press'sFile Transfer Protocol (FTP) service and aRuby on Rails application; nytimes.com experienced its largest traffic on Super Tuesday and the day after.[3]

nytimes.com is supported byonline advertising and subscriptions. In response to legislation such as theGeneral Data Protection Regulation in theEuropean Union andCalifornia Consumer Privacy Act inCalifornia,The New York Times developed its own advertising data program for its direct-sold advertising business in June 2020.[4]

The New York Times began usinglive blogs as chats for the2012 Republican Party presidential debates, later usingSlack for the2016 Republican debates,[5] and covered theNovember 2015 Paris attacks with a live blog.[6] Live blogs begin with a primary post affixed before the live updates to overview the event.[7] TheTimes has used several other live formats, including a live chat—used during theinauguration of Joe Biden to provide side-by-side commentary with live coverage, a live briefing—used during theCOVID-19 pandemic for incremental updates over a longer span of time, and a live blog—used during thetrial of Derek Chauvin for quickly-changing events. Live blogs feature long-form articles woven with short observations.[8] The COVID-19 pandemic shiftedThe New York Times's approach, requiring synchronous collaboration from reporters in different time zones and necessitating the use of email, encrypted apps, chat groups,Google Docs, and phones; the live briefing for the pandemic is the longest-running briefing theTimes has run.[9] The COVID-19 pandemic involved the use of relays from New York toHong Kong,Seoul, andLondon.[10]

The New York Times added an anonymous tip page in December 2016 with support forWhatsApp,Signal, encrypted email, andSecureDrop as part of an initiative by deputy investigations editor Gabriel Dance and then-information security directorRuna Sandvik.[11] By March 2017, the additional channels had revealed audio fromHillary Clinton in reaction to the2016 Democratic National Committee email leak, queries fromDonald Trump's transition team indicating skepticism of foreign aid, and regulations preventingWells Fargo from offering severance pay in the aftermath ofa cross-selling scandal in September 2016.[12] The article on theFederal Bureau of Investigation's raid ofMichael Cohen's office began with an online tip. TheTimes receives hundreds of tip submissions per day.[11] The submissions were initially added to a spreadsheet managed by Dance,[12] but are now added to a database.[11] In October 2017,The New York Times addedTor network support to nytimes.com using Enterprise Onion Toolkit. TheTimes rebuilt its Onion service and issued a new address in 2021.[13]

In late 2007,The New York Times introduced a comments section to its articles. TheTimes's comments section is manually moderated;[14] as of 2017, twelve moderators are responsible for approving comments at a rate of twelve thousand comments per day.The New York Times's comment section does not tolerate, among other things, personal attacks, obscenities, and profanity, in an effort to ensure cogency. The moderation team uses an internal rulebook to determine potentially rule-breaking comments. In one comment, the community desk questioned the use of the word "prostitute" in a comment critiquingRepublican lawmakers for having "sold themselves to the privileged few", with one moderator stating that it was acceptable as a verb. The comment was rejected nonetheless.[15] Comments are enabled on an individual basis. As a result, fewer articles are opened for comments on weekends.[16] In June 2017,The New York Times partnered withJigsaw and Instrument to develop Moderator, a moderation tool that usesmachine learning trained on theTimes's sixteen million comments to determine if a comment should be approved.[17] The introduction of Moderator allowed theTimes to expand the number of articles with comments enabled.[18]

Applications

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The NYTimes application debuted with the introduction of theApp Store on July 10, 2008.Engadget's Scott McNulty wrote critically of the app, negatively comparing it toThe New York Times's mobile website.[19] AniPad version with select articles was released on April 3, 2010, with the release of thefirst-generation iPad.[20] In October,The New York Times expanded NYT Editors' Choice to include the paper's full articles. NYT for iPad was free until 2011.[21] TheTimes applications oniPhone andiPad began offering in-app subscriptions in July 2011.[22] TheTimes released aweb application for iPad—featuring a format summarizing trending headlines onTwitter[23]—and aWindows 8 application in October 2012.[24]

Efforts to ensure profitability through an online magazine and a "Need to Know" subscription emerged inAdweek in July 2013.[25] In March 2014,The New York Times announced three applications—NYT Now, an application that offers pertinent news in a blog format, and two unnamed applications, later known as NYT Opinion[26] and NYT Cooking[27]—to diversify its product laterals.[28]

Podcasts

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The Daily is the modern front page ofThe New York Times.

Sam Dolnick, speaking toIntelligencer in January 2020[29]

The New York Times manages several podcasts, including multiple podcasts with Serial Productions. TheTimes's longest-running podcast isThe Book Review Podcast,[30] debuting asInsideThe New York Times Book Review in April 2006.[31]

The New York Times's defining podcast isThe Daily,[29] a daily news podcast hosted byMichael Barbaro and, since March 2022,Sabrina Tavernise.[32] The podcast debuted on February 1, 2017.[33]

In October 2021,The New York Times began testing "New York Times Audio", an application featuring podcasts from theTimes, audio versions of articles—including from other publications through Audm, and archives fromThis American Life.[34] The application debuted in May 2023 exclusively oniOS forTimes subscribers. New York Times Audio includes exclusive podcasts such asThe Headlines, a daily news recap, andShorts, short audio stories under ten minutes. In addition, a "Reporter Reads" section featuresTimes journalists reading their articles and providing commentary.[35]

Games

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Main article:The New York Times Games

The New York Times has used video games as part of its journalistic efforts, among the first publications to do so,[36] contributing to an increase in Internet traffic.[37] TheTimes began publishingPersuasive Games's newsgames in May 2007, includingFood Import Folly,[38] a video game about theFood and Drug Administration's import inspection process.[39]The New York Times releasedGauging Your Distraction, a video game aboutmobile phones and driving safety developed by psychology professors David Strayer andDavid E. Meyer, in July 2009.[40] In November 2016, theTimes releasedThe Voter Suppression Trail, a video game inspired byThe Oregon Trail (1985). In the game, players play as either a white programmer fromCalifornia, a Latina nurse fromTexas, or an African-American salesman fromWisconsin, and attempt to vote in the2016 presidential election. While the white programmer is able to vote with ease, the Latina nurse and African-American salesman experience long voting lines, strictvoter identification laws, and election observers supportive ofDonald Trump.[41]The Voter Suppression Trail was developed by Chris Baker, Brian Moore, and Mike Lacher of GOP Arcade[42] and is the first game to debut on the Op-Docs page.[43]

The New York Times has developed its own video games. In 2014,The New York Times Magazine introducedSpelling Bee, aword game in which players guess words from a set of letters in ahoneycomb and are awarded points for the length of the word and receive extra points if the word is apangram.[44] The game was proposed byWill Shortz, created byFrank Longo, and has been maintained bySam Ezersky. In May 2018,Spelling Bee was published on nytimes.com, furthering its popularity.[45] In February 2019, theTimes introducedLetter Boxed (in which players form words from letters placed on the edges of a square box),[46] followed in June 2019 byTiles (amatching game in which players form sequences of tile pairings), andVertex (in which players connect vertices to assemble an image).[47] In July 2023,The New York Times introducedConnections, in which players identify groups of words that are connected by a common property.[48] In April, theTimes introducedDigits, a number-based game;Digits was shut down in August.[49]

In January 2022, The New York Times Company acquiredWordle, a word game developed byJosh Wardle in 2021, at a valuation in the "low-seven figures".[50] The acquisition was proposed by David Perpich, a member of the Sulzberger family who proposed the purchase to Knight[51] overSlack after reading about the game.[52]The Washington Post purportedly considered acquiringWordle, according toVanity Fair.[51] At the 2022Game Developers Conference, Wardle stated that he was overwhelmed by the volume ofWordle facsimiles and overzealous monetization practices in other games.[53] Concerns overThe New York Times monetizingWordle by implementing a paywall mounted;[54]Wordle is a client-sidebrowser game and can be played offline by downloading its webpage.[55]Wordle moved to theTimes's servers and website in February.[56] The game was added to the NYT Games application in August,[57] necessitating it be rewritten in theJavaScript libraryReact.[58] In November,The New York Times announced thatTracy Bennett would be theWordle's editor.[59]

In April 2009,The New York Times released a crossword application foriOS developed byMagmic.[60] Asudoku application developed by Magmic was released in October.[61] NYT Crosswords debuted on theGoogle Play Store in November 2016.[62] In April 2017, the application was added to theAmazon Appstore. NYT Crosswords supports saving across devices and nytimes.com.[63] In March 2023, NYT Crosswords was renamed to NYT Games to address the application's other games, includingWordle,Spelling Bee,Tiles, andSudoku. According to Jonathan Knight, chief executive of The New York Times Games, theTimes was concerned over how the application would rank in search results for "crossword".[64] In May 2007,[65]The New York Times releasedThe New York Times Crosswords for theNintendo DS. The game, developed byBudcat Creations and published byMajesco Entertainment, featuresThe New York Times crossword puzzles from March 2004 to November 2006.The New York Times Crosswords includes a campaign mode, in which the player solves seven successive puzzles with increasing difficulty.[66]

Social media

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In October 2017,The New York Times issued guidelines for its journalists, exercising neutrality, transparency, and professionalism. TheTimes revised its guidelines in November 2020 to reflect the use of blocking and muting onTwitter.[67] Then-executive editorDean Baquet urged journalists to use social media less in a letter to employees in April 2022, removing the requirement to maintain a presence on social media. The letter followed a public feud between outgoing technology reporterTaylor Lorenz and White House correspondentMaggie Haberman on Twitter and the resignations of opinion editorsJames Bennet andBari Weiss in 2020 following backlash online;[68] Lorenz faced social media harassment following a segment onTucker Carlson Tonight in March 2021, in which eponymous hostTucker Carlson accused Lorenz of being privileged.The New York Times subsequently released a statement defending Lorenz and calling Carlson's comments "calculated and cruel".[69] Baquet additionally announced an initiative to support journalists experiencing harassment.[68]Times reporter Ryan Mac was among several journalistssuspended on Twitter in December 2022.[70] @nytimesworld was mistakenly suspended in November 2017 after tweeting about Canadian prime ministerJustin Trudeau's apology to indigenous peoples inNewfoundland and Labrador.[71]

The New York Times maintains a social media presence for breaking news events[72] and has fifty-five million followers on Twitter as of March 2023.[73] Following reports that Twitter would charge businessesUS$1,000 per month to retain theirverification status in February 2023,[74]The New York Times stated that it would not pay for verification in a statement in April.[75] Twitter chief executiveElon Musk removed @nytimes's verification status after the statement was released,[76] though it was reinstated later that month.[77] Other affiliated accounts, such as @nytimesarts, retained their verification status.[78] Musk repeatedly insulted theTimes after making the decision, writing that the paper was "propaganda".[79] In August, Musk criticizedThe New York Times for publishing an article describing South African political partyEconomic Freedom Fighters leaderJulius Malema's chants ofdubul' ibhunu as a literal call to violence; the article quoted Musk as stating that Malema was advocating forwhite genocide.[80] A report fromThe Washington Post revealed that Twitter was throttling links by five seconds to theTimes from its link shortener t.co.[81] In October, @nytimes's verification status was removed.[82]

Virtual and augmented reality

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In February 2018,The New York Times published anaugmented reality article foriOS devices, allowing readers to view three-dimensional models ofOlympic athletesNathan Chen,J. R. Celski,Alex Rigsby, andAnna Gasser.[83] Augmented reality technology was used in aDavid Bowie feature in March, with support forAndroid'sARCore platform.[84]

Other services

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In June 2012,The New York Times signed a content deal with news aggregation serviceFlipboard, allowing users to read content from theTimes on the service.[85]The New York Times Company and German mass media companyAxel Springer investedUS$3.8 million in Dutch online news platformBlendle, a service that allows users to pay for access to individual articles,[86] acquiring a joint stake in the company.[87]The New York Times signed a deal to license its content on Blendle in theNetherlands andGermany by 2015.[88] Blendle debuted in the United States in March 2016[89] with theTimes,The Wall Street Journal,The Economist, and theFinancial Times, releasing a mobile application in May.[90] In March 2011,Amazon announced that subscriptions toThe New York Times through itsKindle e-readers would grant access to nytimes.com,[91] followed by theBarnes & Noble Nook in April.[92] In March 2023, Amazon ceased sales on newspaper subscriptions through Kindle Newsstand[93] and canceled existing subscriptions in September.[94] In February 2013, theTimes offered fifteen free articles toStarbucks customers per day,[95] an offer added to the company's loyalty program in 2016.[96]

The New York Times was formerly[97] available onApple's news aggregator serviceApple News and was among several publications to partner with Apple, debuting with the service in November 2015.[98] A study by theTow Center for Digital Journalism found that theTimes was among the largest publications on Apple News.[99] In March 2019,The New York Times dramatically reduced the coverage it provides to Apple ahead of the company's announcement of a subscription service for Apple News; then-chief executive officerMark Thompson stated that theTimes should be "intelligent in the way [it thinks] about [its] partnerships with these platforms" and announced a similar reduction it would impose onFacebook.[100]The New York Times was not included in Apple News+.[101] In June 2020, theTimes ceased distributing its articles in Apple News. Then-chief operating officerMeredith Kopit Levien stated that Apple News does not allow for theTimes to control the "presentation of [its] report". Apple toldThe Verge thatThe New York Times only provided a few stories per day.[102] In May 2023,The Wall Street Journal reported that The New York Times Company had signed an agreement withGoogle to feature theTimes's content onGoogle News forUS$100 million over three years.[103] In December,Wirecutter andThe Athletic joined Apple News+.[104]

References

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Citations

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  1. ^Nagourney, Adam (2023). "Chapter 16: Newspaper Dot Com".The Times: how the newspaper of record survived scandal, scorn, and the transformation of journalism (1st ed.). New York: Crown.ISBN 978-0-451-49938-7.
  2. ^Apcar 2006.
  3. ^Willis 2008.
  4. ^Prabhat 2020.
  5. ^Allen 2015.
  6. ^Bahr 2021.
  7. ^Ingber 2015.
  8. ^Bures 2021.
  9. ^Aridi 2020.
  10. ^Norman 2021.
  11. ^abcHiltner 2018.
  12. ^abHiltner 2017a.
  13. ^Sandvik 2017.
  14. ^Patel 2021.
  15. ^Long 2017.
  16. ^Etim 2017b.
  17. ^Etim 2017a.
  18. ^Salganik & Lee 2020.
  19. ^McNulty 2008.
  20. ^Chittum 2010.
  21. ^Sorrel 2010.
  22. ^Schramm 2011.
  23. ^Heater 2012a.
  24. ^Heater 2012b.
  25. ^D'Orazio 2013.
  26. ^Meyer 2014b.
  27. ^Wilson 2014.
  28. ^Williams 2014.
  29. ^abSchneier 2020.
  30. ^Bisley 2017.
  31. ^Paul 2015.
  32. ^Quah 2022.
  33. ^Barbaro 2017.
  34. ^Smith 2021.
  35. ^Khalid 2023.
  36. ^Gómez-García & de la Hera Conde-Pumpido 2023, p. 451.
  37. ^Usher 2014, p. 150.
  38. ^Miller 2007.
  39. ^Peters 2007.
  40. ^Parker-Pope 2009.
  41. ^D'Anastasio 2016.
  42. ^Farokhmanesh 2016.
  43. ^Crecente 2016.
  44. ^Amlen 2020.
  45. ^Lippman 2020.
  46. ^Sarkar 2019.
  47. ^The New York Times Company 2023d.
  48. ^Morris 2023.
  49. ^Peters 2023c.
  50. ^Pisani 2022.
  51. ^abKlein 2023d.
  52. ^Bruell 2023b.
  53. ^Machkovech 2022.
  54. ^Mukherjee & Datta 2022.
  55. ^Hollister 2022.
  56. ^Carpenter 2022.
  57. ^Hicks 2022.
  58. ^Orland 2023.
  59. ^Orland 2022.
  60. ^The New York Times Company 2009.
  61. ^Metacritic 2009.
  62. ^Amlen 2016.
  63. ^The New York Times Company 2017.
  64. ^Peters 2023b.
  65. ^Harris 2007.
  66. ^Burchfield 2007.
  67. ^The New York Times 2017.
  68. ^abFischer 2022.
  69. ^Moreau 2021.
  70. ^Clark, Heath & Lopatto 2022.
  71. ^Locklear 2017.
  72. ^Lindner 2022.
  73. ^Chen & Mac 2023.
  74. ^Roth 2023a.
  75. ^Reuters 2023.
  76. ^Harwell 2023a.
  77. ^Spangler 2023.
  78. ^Field 2023.
  79. ^Davies 2023.
  80. ^Brodkin 2023.
  81. ^Merrill & Harwell 2023.
  82. ^Harwell 2023b.
  83. ^Robertson 2018.
  84. ^LeFebvre 2018.
  85. ^Chen 2012.
  86. ^Reuters 2014.
  87. ^van Tartwijk 2014.
  88. ^Pompeo & Weprin 2015.
  89. ^Kues 2017.
  90. ^Popper 2016.
  91. ^Savov 2011a.
  92. ^Savov 2011b.
  93. ^Peters 2023a.
  94. ^Krasnoff 2023.
  95. ^Chaey 2013.
  96. ^Ember 2015.
  97. ^Byers 2020.
  98. ^Temperton 2015.
  99. ^Oremus 2018.
  100. ^Seal 2019.
  101. ^Fisher 2020.
  102. ^Gartenberg 2020.
  103. ^Bruell 2023a.
  104. ^Davis 2023.

Works cited

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The New York Times

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The New York Times Company

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Books

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Library resources about
Online platforms of The New York Times

Magazines

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Journals

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Articles

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