WebProNews

Tag: the new york times

  • Google Pushes Return to Office Back to January

    Google Pushes Return to Office Back to January

    Google has pushed its return to the office date back again, just weeks after a previous delay.

    Several weeks ago Google pushed its return date from September to mid-October as a result of the Delta COVID variant. Delta has been a responsible for a surge in cases worldwide, and led to “breakthrough” cases in vaccinated individuals.

    The company has now informed employees they will not be required in the office till at least January 10, according to The New York Times.

    CEO Sundar Pichai let employees know in an email. He said that once the deadline passes, offices in each country will be responsible for deciding when to have employees back, based on the circumstances in their locale. Even then, employees will receive a 30-day notice before coming back.

  • A Single Customer Was Responsible for Fastly’s Outage

    A Single Customer Was Responsible for Fastly’s Outage

    Fastly has said a single customer caused yesterday’s outage, an outage that had widespread repercussions.

    Fastly made headlines yesterday when an issue with the company’s network led to a major outage. As a content delivery network, some of the biggest companies in the world rely on Fastly, including Amazon, the BBC, CNN, Financial Times, The New York Times, Reddit, Spotify, GitHub, Twitch, Stack Overflow, Hulu, HBO Max, Quora, PayPal, Shopify, Stripe and Vimeo.

    According to TheStreet, the company rolled out a software update in May that introduced a bug that could be triggered under very specific circumstances. The bug only needed a single customer to have a very specific configuration for the bug to active, which ultimately happened.

    “Even though there were specific conditions that triggered this outage, we should have anticipated it,” the company said. “We apologize to our customers and those who rely on them for the outage and sincerely thank the community for its support.”

  • CDN Glitch Leads to Massive Internet Outages

    CDN Glitch Leads to Massive Internet Outages

    A glitch at Fastly, a popular CDN, led to outages for some of the internet’s biggest sites Tuesday morning.

    CDNs, or content delivery networks, are distributed networks of servers designed to help websites and web apps manage their user load and remain responsive. Fastly is a popular CDN option that helps power some of the biggest websites on the net.

    Early Tuesday, a glitch at Fastly led to outages at the BBC, CNN, Financial Times, The New York Times, Reddit, Spotify, GitHub, Twitch, Stack Overflow, Hulu, HBO Max, Quora, PayPal, Shopify, Stripe and Vimeo.

    Fastly confirmed the issue, and was able to quickly resolve it, although the outage illustrates the challenges associated with so many websites relying on a single point of potential failure.

    “Today’s outage of major websites once again highlights the importance of access to online news and government services, underlining the importance of the internet for day to day living,” Matthew McDermott, Senior Officer, Access Partnership, a global tech policy consultancy, told WebPronews. “Fastly responded quickly to restored the issue but this serves as a reminder that resilience is an important part of digital infrastructure to modern life. Organisations and government bodies need to look at implementing the steps that look to assess, stabilize, improve and monitor to ensure this issue do not pose further problems in the future. Assessment is needed to determine the server’s bottleneck then stabilizing the issue with implementation of quick fixes will mitigate impact to broader stakeholders and users. After this, stakeholders will need to improve by augmenting and optimize server capabilities to ensure it meets the necessary needs. Lastly, regular monitoring will need to be set up using automated tools to help prevent future issues.”

  • New York Times Tech Workers Unionize

    New York Times Tech Workers Unionize

    Tech workers at The New York Times have formed a union, part of an ongoing trend within the tech industry.

    Once nearly devoid of unions, the tech industry has seen growing support for unionization. Kickstarter employees unionized in early 2020, and Alphabet/Google employees unionized at the beginning of 2021.

    According to Katie Robertson, writing for the Times (of course):

    The group, a majority of which signed cards in support of the effort, of more than 650 employees includes software engineers, designers, data analysts and product managers. It will be represented by the NewsGuild of New York. NewsGuild membership already includes more than 1,300 newsroom workers and business staff members at The Times, as well as workers at other media outlets.

    While that may seem like an inordinate amount of tech workers for a newspaper, the Times has a goal of reaching 10 million digital subscribers by 2025, leading to increased hiring of tech talent. The Times nearly hit the seven million mark in 2020, with digital subscribers becoming the biggest source of revenue.

    The tech workers will not be in a the same bargaining unit as other Times workers represented by NewGuild. The workers have asked management to voluntarily recognize their new union.

  • Trump Administration Bans More Chinese Apps

    Trump Administration Bans More Chinese Apps

    The Trump administration is moving to ban additional Chinese apps, with President trump signing an executive order targeting eight.

    Trump previously banned TikTok, as well as WeChat, citing national security and privacy concerns. He has now signed an executive order banning Alipay, CamScanner, QQ Wallet, SHAREit, Tencent QQ, VMate, WeChat Pay and WPS Office, according to The New York Times.

    “The United States has assessed that a number of Chinese connected software applications automatically capture vast swaths of information from millions of users in the United States, including sensitive personally identifiable information and private information,” the order said. “At this time, action must be taken to address the threat posed by these Chinese connected software applications.”

    The order is not set to go into effect until 45 days from now, well into the Biden administration, casting doubt on whether it will be implemented. With one judge already saying the government “likely overstepped” in its TikTok ban, it’s even more unlikely these new bans will ever see the light of day.

  • Zoom Executive Charged For Shutting Down Meetings For China

    Zoom Executive Charged For Shutting Down Meetings For China

    US prosecutors have charged a China-based Zoom executive for shutting down meetings on behalf of Chinese authorities.

    Xinjiang Jin, also known as Julien Jin, is accused of fabricating reasons to take action against various accounts, especially those critical of or commemorating the Tiananmen Square massacre, according to The New York Times. Jin is accused of gaining access to meetings and then posting prohibited content, such as child pornography or terrorism-related items, in order to get the meetings flagged and shut down.

    “Americans should understand that the Chinese government will not hesitate to exploit companies operating in China to further their international agenda, including repression of free speech,” said FBI Director Christopher Wray in a statement.

    Zoom has since fired Jin and has placed other employees on administrative leave while it conducts an internal investigation. The company’s investigation has already shown that Jin accessed and shared user data with Chinese authorities, although Zoom says it was “fewer than 10 individual users” outside of China. This was despite Zoom’s efforts to restrict China-based employees from accessing the company’s global network.

    To date, Jin has not been arrested and will likely not be, given that he was aiding Chinese authorities. As the NYT points out, however, this is a significant escalation for US prosecutors, emphasizing the tightrope American tech companies operating in China must walk.

  • The New York Times Parts Ways With Apple News

    The New York Times Parts Ways With Apple News

    The New York Times has become one of the first major media outlet to pull out of its deal with Apple News, citing conflicting strategies.

    Apple set out to reimagine the news industry, while at the same time providing a way for beleaguered newspapers to reach new customers in the digital age. Apple News hit the 125 million monthly users milestone earlier this year, and boasts some of the biggest names in news.

    Despite the platform’s success, The Times has announced it will be leaving Apple News, effective June 29. The organization wants to focus on its own distribution and direct relationships with customers, rather than working through a third-party.

    “Core to a healthy model between The Times and the platforms is a direct path for sending those readers back into our environments, where we control the presentation of our report, the relationships with our readers and the nature of our business rules,” Meredith Kopit Levien, chief operating officer, wrote in a memo to employees. “Our relationship with Apple News does not fit within these parameters.”

    It remains to be seen if The Times is a one-off, or if other publishers will follow suit.

  • Clearview AI Caught Lying About Who Can Use Its Software

    Clearview AI Caught Lying About Who Can Use Its Software

    The hits keep on coming: Clearview AI has been caught lying about who can access its controversial facial recognition software.

    Clearview has amassed a database of billions of photos, scraped from millions of websites, including the biggest social media platforms. The company then makes that database available through its facial recognition software. Since The New York Times broke the story in January, Clearview has faced ongoing criticism from lawmakers and privacy advocates alike who say the company represents a fundamental threat to privacy.

    To make matters worse, Buzzfeed discovered documents proving the company plans to expand internationally, including with authoritarian regimes. Following that, Clearview’s entire client list was stolen, showing its international expansion has already begun.

    Amid the scrutiny and controversy, Clearview has tried to reassure critics that it is responsible in its use of its database. In fact, in a blog post on the company’s site, Clearview says its “search engine is available only for law enforcement agencies and select security professionals to use as an investigative tool.”

    Similarly, the company’s Code of Conduct emphasizes their software is for law enforcement and security professionals, and that they hold themselves to a high standard of ethics, integrity and professionalism.

    There’s just one problem: it’s not true, if the NYT’s report is accurate. According to the report, the NYT “has identified multiple individuals with active access to Clearview’s technology who are not law enforcement officials. And for more than a year before the company became the subject of public scrutiny, the app had been freely used in the wild by the company’s investors, clients and friends.

    “Those with Clearview logins used facial recognition at parties, on dates and at business gatherings, giving demonstrations of its power for fun or using it to identify people whose names they didn’t know or couldn’t recall.”

    This is just the latest example of the irresponsible and unethical way Clearview has conducted business.

  • Troubles Mount For Clearview AI, Facial Recognition Firm

    Troubles Mount For Clearview AI, Facial Recognition Firm

    According to a report by The Verge, Clearview AI is facing challenges to both its credibility and the legality of the service it provides.

    On the heels of reports, originally covered by the New York Times, that Clearview AI has amassed more than three billion photos, scraped from social media platforms and millions of websites—and has incurred Twitter’s ire in the process—it appears the company has not been honest about its background, capabilities or the extent of its successes.

    A BuzzFeed report points out that Clearview AI’s predecessor program, Smartcheckr, was specifically marketed as being able to “provide voter ad microtargeting and ‘extreme opposition research’ to Paul Nehlen, a white nationalist who was running on an extremist platform to fill the Wisconsin congressional seat of the departing speaker of the House, Paul Ryan.”

    Further hurting the company’s credibility is an example it uses in its marketing, about an alleged terrorist that was apprehended in New York City after causing panic by disguising rice cookers as bombs. The company cites the case as one of thousands of instances in which it has aided law enforcement. The only problem is that the NYPD said they did not use Clearview in that case.

    “The NYPD did not use Clearview technology to identify the suspect in the August 16th rice cooker incident,” a spokesperson for the NYPD told BuzzFeed News. “The NYPD identified the suspect using the Department’s facial recognition practice where a still image from a surveillance video was compared to a pool of lawfully possessed arrest photos.”

    That last statement, regarding “lawfully possessed arrest photos,” is particularly stinging as the company is beginning to face legal pushback over its activities.

    New York Times journalist Kashmir Hill, who originally broke the story, cited the example of asking police officers she was interviewing to run her face through Clearview’s database. “And that’s when things got kooky,” Hill writes. “The officers said there were no results — which seemed strange because I have a lot of photos online — and later told me that the company called them after they ran my photo to tell them they shouldn’t speak to the media. The company wasn’t talking to me, but it was tracking who I was talking to.”

    Needless to say, such an Orwellian use of the technology is not sitting well with some lawmakers. According to The Verge, members of Congress are beginning to voice concerns, with Senator Ed Markey sending a letter to Clearview founder Ton-That demanding answers.

    “The ways in which this technology could be weaponized are vast and disturbing. Using Clearview’s technology, a criminal could easily find out where someone walking down the street lives or works. A foreign adversary could quickly gather information about targeted individuals for blackmail purposes,” writes Markey. “Clearview’s product appears to pose particularly chilling privacy risks, and I am deeply concerned that it is capable of fundamentally dismantling Americans’ expectation that they can move, assemble, or simply appear in public without being identified.”

    The Verge also cites a recent Twitter post by Senator Ron Wyden, one of the staunchest supporters of individual privacy, in which he comments on the above disturbing instance of Clearview monitoring Ms. Hill’s interactions with police officers.

    “It’s extremely troubling that this company may have monitored usage specifically to tamp down questions from journalists about the legality of their app. Everyday we witness a growing need for strong federal laws to protect Americans’ privacy.”

    —Ron Wyden (@RonWyden) January 19, 2020

    Ultimately, Clearview may well provide the impetus for lawmakers to craft a comprehensive, national-level privacy law, something even tech CEOs are calling for.

  • The Company That Can End Privacy Just Ran Afoul of Twitter

    The Company That Can End Privacy Just Ran Afoul of Twitter

    Clearview AI, the company that made headlines last week for potentially ending privacy as we know it, has incurred the wrath of Twitter, according to The Seattle Times.

    New York Times journalist Kashmir Hill first reported on Clearview AI, a small, little-known startup that allows you to upload a photo and then compare it against a database of more than three billion photos the company has amassed. Clearview’s system will then show you “public photos of that person, along with links to where those photos appeared.”

    Clearview has built its database by scraping Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Venmo and millions of other websites for photos of people, something that is blatantly against most companies’ terms of service. The database is so far beyond anything the government has that some 600 law enforcement agencies have begun using Clearview—without any public scrutiny or a legislative stance on the legality of what Clearview does.

    To make matters even worse, once a person’s photos or social media profile has been scraped and added to the database, there is currently no way to have the company remove it. The only recourse available to individuals is to change the privacy settings of their social media profiles to prevent search engines from accessing them. This will stop Clearview from scraping any additional photos from their profile but, again, it does nothing to address any photos they may already have.

    At least one company is taking a strong stand against Clearview, namely Twitter. The Seattle Times is reporting that Twitter has sent Clearview a cease-and-desist demanding it stop scraping their site and user profiles for “any reason.” The cease-and-desist further demands that Clearview delete any and all data it has already collected from Twitter.

    Clearview is a prime example of what Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai was talking about, in an op-ed he published in the Financial Times, when he said tech companies needed to take responsibility for the technology they create, not just charge ahead because they can. Similarly, Salesforce co-CEO Keith Block recently said the U.S. needed a national privacy law similar to the EU’s GDPR. If Clearview doesn’t make a case for such regulation…nothing will.

    In the meantime, here’s to hoping every other company and website Clearview has scraped for photos takes as strong a stance as Twitter.

  • Woody Allen Responds to Molestation Allegations

    Woody Allen, the famed film director and one-time lover of actress Mia Farrow, published an op-ed in Friday’s edition of The New York Times responding to reignited allegations of molestation by his adopted daughter, Dylan.

    In 1992, during Allen’s court battle with Farrow at the end of their 12-year-long relationship, Dylan, then 7, claimed that Allen had sexually abused her.

    The claims came on the heels of the news that Allen had been having an affair with Farrow’s 19-year-old daughter, Soon-Yi Previn, who was adopted by Mia Farrow and musician Andre Previn. Allen and Soon-Yi Previn continued their relationship, eventually marrying five years later.

    Allen maintains that the frenzy surrounding the claims made by Dylan stem from nothing more than the affects of a child brainwashed to hate their father by their jilted mother.

    In the Times piece, Allen writes, “Not that I doubt Dylan hasn’t come to believe she’s been molested, but if from the age of 7 a vulnerable child is taught by a strong mother to hate her father because he is a monster who abused her, is it so inconceivable that after many years of this indoctrination the image of me Mia wanted to establish had taken root?”

    Dylan Farrow quickly responded to Allen’s disregard for the situation and his determination that the rumors were false. (There was a police investigation in 1992, but it did not conclude in any charges being brought against the filmmaker.)

    “Once again, Woody Allen is attacking me and my family in an effort to discredit and silence me — but nothing he says or writes can change the truth,” Dylan says. “For 20 years, I have never wavered in describing what he did to me. I will carry the memories of surviving these experiences for the rest of my life.”

    Allen and Farrow had three children together; two adopted and a biological son, Satchel. Satchel now goes by Ronan Farrow, and is estranged from his father. He recently took to Twitter to vent and show support for his sister.

    Main image courtesy TheLipTV via YouTube.

  • Yahoo News Gets NYT Deputy News Editor Megan Liberman As New Editor In Chief

    Yahoo has just added New York Times deputy news editor Megan Liberman as the new editor in chief at Yahoo News. The company says she will lead a “major expansion” of Yahoo News, which will bring in “new voices and defining features”.

    Specifically, Liberman will be focusing on original reporting, social news gathering, video and live events coverage.

    “Megan is a dynamic addition to the Yahoo News team,” said Robertson Barrett, Vice President of Yahoo News and Finance. “As deputy news editor at The New York Times she drove some of the most successful digital initiatives, from its blog network to Nate Silver’s multi-platform presence to live streamed coverage of the 2012 elections. She is a natural fit to lead editorial for the world’s largest news site, and she will help us take Yahoo News to the next level.”

    Liberman has also served as deputy editor at The New York Times Magazine. There, she oversaw digital features and strategy, as well as political coverage and other Times magazines. She also launched Motherlode, the Times’ parenting blog.

    According to recent comScore data, Yahoo is the largest web property in the U.S., surpassing Google in July.

    Image: Yahoo

  • These Are Some Of The First Apps You’ll See On Google Glass

    Google Glass is going to change our lives, or so says Google. It’s latest marketing campaign seems to indicate as much, but what about everyday use of Glass that doesn’t involve flying in jets or skydiving? What about the normal apps we use on our smartphones? How will those translate to Glass?

    The Google Glass team hosted a developer panel at SXSW Interactive where they showed off a variety of third party apps for the platform. This is the first time that Google has shown anything beyond in-house software for the device, and the results are promising.

    To prevent any unwanted notifications or annoying interruptions that would seem inherent to wearable computing, Google is putting strict guidelines into place for app developers. The four main rules are “design for glass,” “don’t get in the way,” “keep it timely,” and “avoid the unexpected.” These four rules will hopefully ensure that Glass never becomes a nuisance.

    Sticking to these design principles, The New York Times app really seems to embrace what Glass can bring to consumers. First and foremost, the app can deliver hourly breaking news updates to your peripheral vision, but only if you want it to. To view news manually, you just have to use the “look up” head gesture to have a stream of images and headlines delivered to Glass.

    Other third party app developers include Path and Evernote. Both of which allow you to share images with people right from Glass while also receiving notifications when friends upload photos to each respective service.

    As for Google’s own services, the company showed off how Gmail will work on Glass. For starters, users can reply to emails using Glass’ built in microphone. The app can also be configured to only deliver emails marked as important to Glass so that your peripheral vision is not always bombarded with each and every email sent your way.

    Here’s a video taken at the talk showcasing how Gmail works on Glass:

    Other developers will be able to start developing for Glass later this year when the Mirror API is released. Google will probably be holding more hackathons for Glass as well in the near future, and maybe the next one won’t be exclusive to those who preordered the hardware at least year’s Google I/O.

    [h/t: The Verge]

  • That Hilarious Guy Fieri Restaurant Review Has Over 45,000 Facebook Shares

    In what has to be one of the most viral reviews of all time, a New York Times restaurant review has hit a ridiculous number of shares on Facebook. Today, the social network announced that “As Not Seen on TV,” the uncompromising teardown of Guy Fieri’s new Times Square restaurant, has over 45,000 shares across the site.

    I know I’ve seen at least a dozen of my friends post the article. Funny photos and memes can get thousands of shares on Facebook – even hundreds of thousands (just ask George Takei). But for an article to get this kind of viral reach is pretty unusual.

    The whole review, written by Pete Wells as a series of questions to owner Guy Fieri, is a giant f*ck you to the whole food network celebrity chef culture. Or maybe just the worst of it.

    Facebook + Media

    This viral review has now been shared more than 45,000 times on Facebook.

    (image)Restaurant Review: Guy’s American Kitchen & Bar in Times Square
    What the food and service at Guy Fieri’s Times Square establishment conjure is pure bafflement, among other things.

    Here are some select gems:

    Why is one of the few things on your menu that can be eaten without fear or regret — a lunch-only sandwich of chopped soy-glazed pork with coleslaw and cucumbers — called a Roasted Pork Bahn Mi, when it resembles that item about as much as you resemble Emily Dickinson?

    and…

    When you hung that sign by the entrance that says, WELCOME TO FLAVOR TOWN!, were you just messing with our heads?

    or how about…

    What accounts for the vast difference between the Donkey Sauce recipe you’ve published and the Donkey Sauce in your restaurant? Why has the hearty, rustic appeal of roasted-garlic mayonnaise been replaced by something that tastes like Miracle Whip with minced raw garlic? And when we hear the words Donkey Sauce, which part of the donkey are we supposed to think about?

    and in closing…

    Is the entire restaurant a very expensive piece of conceptual art? Is the shapeless, structureless baked alaska that droops and slumps and collapses while you eat it, or don’t eat it, supposed to be a representation in sugar and eggs of the experience of going insane?

    Ouch. The article, while undeniably hilarious, is pretty mean-spirited. Guy has had some people come to his defense.

    But that’s irrelevant. What’s relevant is that, at least according to popularity on Facebook, this review is one of the top food articles of the year.

  • Wall Street Journal remains No. 1 US newspaper

    According to the Audit Bureau of Circulation, the Wall Street Journal is still the number one most circulated publication in America. On average the Journal sells about 2.1 million weekday editions of their paper.

    USA Today comes in just behind them at 1.8 million papers per day and the New York Times ranks in third place selling 1.6 million weekday papers. This is an impressive 73% increase from just one year earlier.

    The averages are based on a six month period ending March 31st of this year. On average, total newspaper circulation increased 1%. Digital circulation, which accounts for about 14% of the total, is up from last year by almost 9%. Digital editions and paywalls have become more prevalent as mobile devices continue to gain popularity.

    A J.P. Morgan analysts comments on the growing trend of digital news:

    “Some companies [such as NYT] have demonstrated that consumers are willing to pay a premium for differentiated content,”

    “for the industry overall, the impact of print declines is likely to outweigh any digital benefit for the foreseeable future.”

    The Audit Bureau of Circulations cautions against the accuracy of the findings as it is increasingly harder to measure the circulation of papers due to bundled subscriptions, branded editions, and multiple delivery platforms.

  • Free Nook With Purchase of NYT Offer Runs Through March 9th

    Barnes & Noble has just announced a new promotion that offers big savings on their Nook line of e-readers, but also requires a pretty big commitment to a certain digital publication.

    If you were looking to purchase a year’s subscription to one of the most venerable newspapers in the country and have yet to purchase the device on which to read it, you’re in luck. Barnes & Noble is giving a free Nook Touch to anyone who purchases 1 year of the New York Times.

    That subscription will run you $19.99 a month.

    Doing the math here, that means that you’ll be paying roughly $240 for the year of the Times. The Nook Touch’s standard price is $99. A free Nook is a sweet deal, but in order to really feel like you’re saving on this promotion, you probably have to have already wanted a NYT subscription.

    If you feel like upgrading, you can also snag the Nook Color for $99 with the purchase of the subscription. That’s $100 of the original price.

    “We are excited to work with The New York Times to present this unique offer that, for the first time ever, gives readers a chance to get a one-year subscription to our top-selling digital newspaper with an award-winning NOOK Simple Touch at no cost, or a NOOK Color at a $100 savings,” said Jonathan Shar, vice president and general manager of digital newsstand at Barnes & Noble. “Our customers love to have their newspaper automatically delivered to their NOOK device each morning, ready to read anytime and anywhere.”

    If celebrity gossip is more your thing, you can also buy a 1-year subscription to People and you will be rewarded with $50 off the Nook Tablet, which will shoot the price down to $199. The People subscription win cost you $9.99 a month.

  • WikiLeaks Slams The New York Times via Twitter

    Yesterday, the New York Times published an article courtesy of Read Write Web that suggested that WikiLeaks was responsible for exposing the sources behind over 250,000 leaked classified cables from U.S. embassies around the world.

    And today, WikiLeaks has responded via Twitter.

    The article published in the Times echoes accusations made by the German news magazine Der Spiegel. They say that a password leaked by Julian Assange and the taking of files by former WikiLeaks spokesman Daniel Domscheit-Berg contributed to the exposure of the unredacted cables – meaning that sources were exposed.

    From the Times article

    When Domscheit-Berg left last year, he wound up taking a number of files with him, including that of the original cables. At the same time, Assange had given an “external contact” the file’s password so he could examine the materials. Domscheit-Berg returned the materials late in the year, and this year Wikileaks supporters “released a copy of this data collection onto the Internet as a kind of public archive of the documents that WikiLeaks had previously published.” The full, unedited documents were contained within that copy. The password was also apparently published.

    WikiLeaks hit back with this series of Tweets –

    Totally false that any WikiLeaks sources have been exposed or will be exposed. NYT drooling, senile, and evil. http://t.co/sl8FD6w 21 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Sorry, NYT, It doesn’t matter how many sleazy hack jobs like Ravi Somaiya you hire, we’ve out published your Pentagon tabloid already. 19 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    There has been no WikiLeaks error. There has been a grossly negligent mainstream media error, to put it generously. 8 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Daniel Domscheit-Berg left WikiLeaks in 2010 due to the release of documents concerning the Iraq War. In early 2011, Domscheit-Berg launched OpenLeaks, a sort of WikiLeaks competitor.

    If things went down like the Times article says they did, that’s bad news for WikiLeaks. Not only does it damage their security cred but it definitely exposes the sources to retributive measures. Of course, as you can see above, WikiLeaks is vehemently denying that they committed any mistakes. Their implications are that the Times is running anti-WikiLeaks propaganda, as Death and Taxes points out.

  • The New York Times Rolls Out iPad App

    The New York Times has introduced its free app for the iPad called "The Editors’ Choice app."

    The Editors’ Choice app offers two pages of content from the top eight to ten articles in news, business, technology, opinion and feature sections from The Times along with videos and slideshows.

    The New York Times says the ad-supported app is optimized to take advantage of the iPad’s large screen display, video and slideshow capabilities.  The Times is also planning a full, paid app for iPad.

    NYT-iPad

    "Times readers will find the iPad to be an exceptionally useful and entertaining way to closely follow what is happening around them locally, nationally and internationally," said Yasmin Namini, senior vice president, marketing and circulation, The New York Times Media Group, and general manager, reader applications.

    Features of the app include:

    *Offline reading – download and sync articles and images to iPad for viewing offline

    *Share options – email articles to others from the app