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How The New York Times incorporates editorial judgment in algorithms to curate its home page The Times’ algorithmic recommendations team on responding to reader feedback, newsroom concerns, and technical hurdles. Whether on the web or the app, the home page of The New York Times is a crucial gateway, setting the stage for readers’ experiences and guiding them to the most important news of the day.
Last month, The New York Times released new guidelines around the way its reporters use Twitter. Twitter was taking up too much of journalists’ time, the Times said. It was also driving harassment and abuse, and bad tweets harm the reputation of the paper and of its staffers. The company also made it clear that Twitter is truly optional, and that using it isn’t a job requirement. There must be an
What will happen when newspapers kill print and go online-only? Most of that print audience will just…disappear A new study of The Independent’s 2016 shift to online-only finds that its print readership didn’t move to digital when the newspaper did. It’s now “more glanced at, it seems, than gorged on.” For American daily newspapers, the story of the last decade-plus hasn’t been about mass closures
The mobile phone comes with a slate of different features and user behaviors that designers and developers can exploit and need to cater to. “There can be rich opportunities that come with these devices: the gyroscope that senses tilt and movement, easier geolocation, the built-in camera,” Jessica Yu, global head of visuals at The Wall Street Journal, said. “All platforms have their unique opportu
A blow for mobile advertising: The next version of Safari will let users block ads on iPhones and iPads Think making money on mobile advertising is hard now? Think how much more difficult it will be with a significant share of your audience is blocking all your ads — all with a simple download from the App Store. It didn’t get a mention in Apple’s big keynote announcements Monday — which already h
BuzzFeed is building a new mobile app just for news — theirs and everyone else’s Ben Smith says it will be a guide through the noise of news in social media, and that journalists should realize they’re “part of a collaborative project with other news outlets.” BuzzFeed is hiring product and editorial leads to build a new news app for the company, starting a team which will eventually include up to
Hacker Monthly: It’s the best of the Internet, printed out, and it’s turning a profit Online goes offline: Every month, Lim Cheng Soon sorts through the noise of Hacker News to find the best work and turn it into a magazine. Lim Cheng Soon’s story defies convention. It’s a story about the value of curation, the value of community, and, for some, the lasting value of print. Lim is addicted to Hacke
The New York Times’ R&D Lab has built a tool that explores the life stories take in the social space Some of the most exciting work taking place in The New York Times building is being done on the 28th floor, in the paper’s Research and Development Lab. The group serves essentially as a skunkworks project for a news institution that stands to benefit, financially and otherwise, from creative think
#DemandAlJazeera: How Al Jazeera is using social media to cover Egypt—and distribute its content in the US Mark noted in today’s This Week in Review that “the organization that has shined the brightest over the past 10 days is unquestionably Al Jazeera.” Most viewers in the US, though, have had to watch the news network’s coverage of the uprisings in Egypt on their computers rather than their tele
“They swear like sailors, but boy, they’re smart.” That’s how NPR strategist Andy Carvin described the 1.4 million fans who comment and share stories through NPR’s Facebook page. The page — originally created by an NPR enthusiast from Canada — is one of the more popular media outlets on Facebook. Carvin talked about NPR’s approach to Facebook last night as part of an ONA-sponsored media event at F
If you’ve been following our coverage of Journalism Online, the pay-for-news venture founded by Steve Brill, Gordon Crovitz, and Leo Hindery, you know how they plan to generate revenue for news sites. What hasn’t been clear is how the firm itself will make money. But in a document submitted to the Newspaper Association of America, which was just made public, Journalism Online reveals its business
Google developing a micropayment platform and pitching newspapers: “‘Open’ need not mean free” Google is developing a micropayment platform that will be “available to both Google and non-Google properties within the next year,” according to a document the company submitted to the Newspaper Association of America. The system, an extension of Google Checkout, would be a new and unexpected option for
What The Associated Press’ tracking beacon is — and what it isn’t So what about THE BEACON? When The Associated Press said last month that it was building a “news registry” of AP content, most reaction focused on the so-called “tracking beacon” that will monitor usage across the web. I use quotation marks because, well, those are metaphors for technology that’s still in development: The AP documen
Plus: One way local newspapers covered the pandemic well, how rational thinking can encourage misinformation, and what a Muslim journalistic value system looks like.
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