If we ever thought the newspaper industry was tough in its treatment of employees, the behaviour of digital companies demonstrates how relative these things are. We suspected there was a price for those playrooms and cool workstations and organic cafes in Silicon...
Archive

Contents
Editorial Fast and furious
Wendy Sloane What Russians believe
Georgina Lee Fact checking is vital
Julian Petley Don’t knock The New York Times
Emma Robinson Finding community news
ALSO IN THE PRINT EDITION THIS QUARTER:
Martin Bright admires brave reporters
Ben Whitelaw explains Twitter blue ticks
David Robson deplores guest editors
Tom Leonard worries about US journalists
James Hanning How Number 10 lost the plot
Julia Langdon The machine that was
jane fae Wait until Labour gets in
Jessica Hill A reporter’s moral dilemma
James Brindle Giving youngsters a hand
Catherine Mayer Only excellence will do
BOOK REVIEWS
Alex Massie reads Johnson’s Boswell
Roger Mosey congratulates the BBC
Alex Brummer finds a pyramid of lies
Ivor Gaber hopes for better news
Hugh Pope celebrates foreign fixers
Phil Harding asks Prince Andrew why
John Lloyd does not bow to the chief
PLUS:
Quotes of the quarter
Charles Wheeler Award winner
Cudlipp Award
The way we were
Time to lie down for a little rest?
Freedom-of-speech-loving British newspapers are getting far too angry about writers expressing opinions in The New York Times
Getting it right really matters
When warring sides are skilled in propaganda how does a television station make sure the footage is real?
Where Russians go for the news
An older generation relies on television for news about war in Ukraine – and President Putin is keen to keep it that way
How to find news stories
Many fear the newspaper industry is losing touch with communities. A scheme funded by an internet giant is seeking to redress the balance