Almost four years have passed since Covid-19 struck. In America, the pandemic killed well over a million people and left millions more with lingering health problems. Much of normal life came to a halt, partly because of official lockdowns but largely because fear of infection kept people home. The big question in the years that followed was whether America would ever fully recover from that shock
Campbell Brown, Facebook’s top news executive, said this month that she was leaving the company. Twitter, now known as X, removed headlines from the platform days later. The head of Instagram’s Threads app, an X competitor, reiterated that his social network would not amplify news. Even Google — the strongest partner to news organizations over the past 10 years — has become less dependable, making
An aggressively adorable reality show that’s been on for decades in Japan recently hit Netflix. It is called “Old Enough!” and depicts Japanese little ones, some as young as 2, taking their first solo journeys. (The show’s original title is translated as “My First Errand.”) These tiny children are shown toddling by themselves to the grocery store, to their grandmother’s house to pick something up
For years, the Chinese government has prevented its 1.4 billion people from speaking freely online. A digital wall separated them from the rest of the world. Then, for a precious few days, that wall was breached. Clubhouse, a new social media app that emerged faster than the censors could block it, became a place for Mandarin Chinese speakers from the mainland and anywhere else to speak their mind
The comments section is closed. To submit a letter to the editor for publication, write to letters@nytimes.com. States were surveyed for this article before Election Day. We'll update this table for the states that have not been called in the presidential race; full results are here. Although many winners may quickly be evident on election night, the increase in mail voting because of the pandemic
South Korea’s president, Moon Jae-in, left, with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan at the Group of 20 nations meeting in Japan last month. Credit...Brendan Smialowski/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images Last month, before an audience of world leaders, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan forcefully defended the global trade order that President Trump has so dramatically fractured. “A free and open
The Asahi Shimbun was distributed on a Tokyo street last year.Credit...Franck Robichon/European Pressphoto Agency TAIPEI, Taiwan — The Asahi Shimbun, Japan’s second-largest daily newspaper, retracted an influential news report on the Fukushima nuclear disaster on Thursday after weeks of criticism from other news organizations. The move, which included an apology, came a month after the newspaper r
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