News

Major U.S. Newspaper Is Refusing To Endorse Presidential Candidate. Story by Chris Rosvoglou • 3d. W ith the presidential election just 13 days away, ... US Vice President Kamala Harris, ...
Only 3 out of 67 print news articles (or 4%) from five of the top U.S. newspapers reporting on inflation following the April 2024 Consumer Price Index report included crucial context about ...
Top 25 US newspaper circulations: Largest print titles fall 14% in year to March 2023. The biggest print titles in the US continue to shed circulation in 2023.
President Donald Trump has received only six endorsements from major newspapers for his reelection, as of Nov 2. Meanwhile, more than 40 news outlets have endorsed Democratic presidential nominee ...
Eight major U.S. newspapers, including The Chicago Tribune, are suing OpenAI and Microsoft over copyright infringement for "purloining millions of the publishers' copyrighted articles without ...
Major U.S. Newspapers Announce Staff Cuts The New York Times and Boston Globe have announced they will cut 4 percent of the papers' staffs, on top of a 2-percent cut made last year.
Washington Post becomes second major US newspaper this week to not endorse a presidential candidate. ... Many American newspapers have been dropping editorial endorsements in recent years.
A group of eight U.S. newspaper publishers filed a lawsuit in New York federal court on Tuesday, claiming Microsoft and artificial intelligence developer OpenAI broke copyright law by using the ...
Tribune Publishing is one of the US' biggest media groups, owning several major newspapers such as the Hartford Courant, The Morning Call, The Baltimore Sun, The Virginian-Pilot, Daily Press ...
Cyberattack hits major U.S. newspapers and affects distribution By Caroline Linton December 30, 2018 / 12:02 AM EST / CBS News ...
Tribune Publishing Co., owner of the Chicago Tribune (seen here in 2006), Orlando Sentinel, New York Daily News and other papers announced that it has been sold to hedge fund Alden Global Capital.
Less than two weeks before Election Day, The Washington Post said Friday it would not endorse a candidate for president in this year’s tightly contested race and would avoid doing so in the future.