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Aaron Krolik

Aaron Krolik

Data & Technical Correspondent at The New York Times

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Email address
a*****@*******.comGet email address
Influence score
55
Phone
(XXX) XXX-XXXX Get mobile number
Location
United States
Languages
  • English
Covering topics
  • Business
  • Engineering
  • Computers & Technology

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Recent Articles

nytimes.com

U.S. Agencies Fund, and Fight With, Elon Musk. A Trump Presidency Could Give Him Power Over Them.

Mr. Musk, who holds billions in federal contracts, wants to be in charge of the regulators that oversee him if Donald Trump wins.
nytimes.com

How Telegram Became a Playground for Criminals, Extremists and Terr...

Drug dealers, scammers and white nationalists openly conduct business and spread toxic speech on the platform, according to a Times analysis of more than 3.2 million Telegram messages.
nytimes.com

Russia Strengthens Its Internet Controls in Critical Year for Putin

Facing an election this weekend and the fallout from Aleksei Navalny’s death and the war in Ukraine, Russia has intensified online censorship using techniques pioneered by China.
nytimes.com

Are You a Cubicle Cat or a Couch Koala? Test Your Office Personalit...

Personality assessment has ballooned into a giant industry that aims to explain your working style. Take our quiz to find out what kind of office creature you are.
nytimes.com

Online Cheating Charges Upend Dartmouth Medical School (Published 2...

The university accused 17 students of cheating on remote exams, raising questions about data mining and sowing mistrust on campus.
nytimes.com

At Talkspace, Start-Up Culture Collides With Mental Health Concerns...

The therapy-by-text company made burner phones available for fake reviews and doesn’t adequately respect client privacy, former employees say.
nytimes.com

A Feature on Zoom Secretly Displayed Data From People’s LinkedIn Pr...

After an inquiry from Times reporters, Zoom said it would disable a data-mining feature that could be used to snoop on participants during meetings without their knowledge.
nytimes.com

Your Apps Know Where You Were Last Night, and They’re Not Keeping I...

Dozens of companies use smartphone locations to help advertisers and even hedge funds. They say it’s anonymous, but the data shows how personal it is.