February 2017

Journalists, Battered and Groggy, Find a Renewed Sense of Mission

White House misconduct. Sensational leaks. Battling broadsheets. The swirling story around President Trump’s dealings with Russia is being compared in journalism circles to past blockbusters like Watergate and the Monica Lewinsky scandal — with a 21st-century twist. News organizations like The Washington Post, The New York Times and CNN are jousting for scoops, but instead of sending clerks to grab the early editions from newsstands, editors watch the news unfold on Twitter in real time. Anonymous sources are driving bombshell stories, and leaks are springing from encrypted iPhone messaging apps rather than from meetings in underground parking garages. The news cycle begins at sunrise, as groggy reporters hear the ping of a presidential tweet, and ends sometime in the overnight hours, as newspaper editors tear up planned front pages scrambled by the latest revelation from Washington. In consequence and velocity, the political developments of the past four weeks — has it been only four weeks? — are jogging memories of momentous journalistic times.

Alphabet is sending hundreds of staff from its internet access unit to Google

Alphabet has shifted hundreds of staff from its internet access unit — which is called Access, and includes Google Fiber — over to Google, and hired former broadband executive Gregory McCray to head the unit. McCray, previously CEO of Aero Communications, replaces Craig Barratt, who left his role as chief executive of Access in October.

The changes at Access raise questions about the future of the subsidiary. Barratt’s departure coincided with other cutbacks at Access. These included an announcement of layoffs and the halting of a rollout of high-speed internet service Fiber to new cities. (At one point last year, it seemed Alphabet wanted to build out high-speed fiber internet access across the US, competing directly with large telecom companies like Comcast and AT&T. That doesn’t seem to be the case anymore.) Asked if Access could potentially shut down following the latest cutbacks, a spokesperson for the unit said it would not be going away, noting that it is among four core revenue drivers of Alphabet’s “Other Bets,” or smaller units outside of Google.