Yesterday it announced a new agreement to offer its service to New York Times nyt (nyse: nyt - news - people) employees.
On Thursday, The New York Times (NYT) was hacked by what was believed to be Chinese hacktivists.
W. Scripps Company (SSP), New York Times Company (NYT), and The McClatchy Company (MNI).
Also late yesterday, The New York Times Company (NYT) said president and CEO Janet Robinson will retire as of December 31.
There's also a pretty big fuss being made this morning over remarks made by Bill Keller, executive editor at the New York Times responsible for the NYT's web presence.
The founder of DealBook, a blog purchased by the New York Times (NYSE: NYT), also got details from others in a white paper on the topic.
Andres was one of the founders of Abuzz, a Web service, which The New York Times (nyse: NYT - news - people) acquired in 1999.
The New York Times (nyse: NYT - news - people ) bought the unproven technology for an undisclosed sum in 1999, but has since shelved it.
The New York Times Co. ( NYT - news - people ) and now owned by billionaire Wendy P.
The seller of the still life has been identified as the New York Times Co. (nyse: NYT - news - people ).
The sale of the Minneapolis paper mirrors the assessment of the Boston Globe by JPMorgan Chase, which reportedly valued that paper at half what the New York Times Co. (nyse: NYT - news - people ) paid for it in 1993.
Over in print media, Janet Robinson , chief executive of The New York Times Co. (nyse: NYT - news - people ), plans to shrink the width of its flagship paper and cut 250 jobs in the face of a dismal profit picture.
The New York Times Co. (nyse: NYT - news - people ) strives mightily to be of consequence (it says in a press release that its "core purpose is to enhance society"), but the revenue of this corporation is scarcely half the collective revenue of the country's weekly newspapers.
When a Morgan Stanley (nyse: MS - news - people ) analyst recently began agitating for change at the New York Times Co. (nyse: NYT - news - people ), Chairman Arthur Sulzberger Jr. defended his family's supervoting power by claiming the nation's three preeminent newspapers--the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post (nyse: WPO - news - people )--owe their journalistic greatness to control by families like his.
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