Google’s A.I. Search Leaves Publishers Scrambling
Since Google overhauled its search engine, publishers have tried to assess the danger to their brittle business models while calling for government intervention.
By Nico Grant and Katie Robertson
Since Google overhauled its search engine, publishers have tried to assess the danger to their brittle business models while calling for government intervention.
By Nico Grant and Katie Robertson
It was the latest example of journalists having to weigh the news value of a major political moment against the challenges of reporting on a candidate who regularly speaks in falsehoods.
By Michael M. Grynbaum
The case concerns Mary L. Trump’s disclosure of financial documents to a team of reporters at The New York Times.
By Michael M. Grynbaum
Adjusted operating profit was $76.1 million, an increase of about 41 percent from a year earlier.
By Benjamin Mullin
Here is the full list of winners and finalists.
By The New York Times
The prize for public service went to ProPublica for coverage of the Supreme Court. The Pulitzer board also issued a special citation for journalists covering the Middle East.
By Michael M. Grynbaum
The tech giant and its partner OpenAI were accused of infringing on copyrights to train A.I. technologies like the online chatbot ChatGPT.
By Cade Metz and Karen Weise
The artificial intelligence start-up argued that its online chatbot, ChatGPT, is not a substitute for a New York Times subscription.
By Cade Metz and Katie Robertson
The Times was honored for its coverage of the Israel-Hamas war. And ProPublica won a prize for revealing the lavish gifts and luxury trips given to Justice Clarence Thomas.
By Katie Robertson
At the end of the year, The Times had 10.36 million subscribers, 9.7 million of them digital-only.
By Katie Robertson
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