But they're for the most part just as ignorant of religion, as the New
York Times error indicates.
Not exact matches
That's according to Knowingly CEO Byron Reese, whose new tool, Correctica, recently found scads of
errors even on reputable websites operated by big guns such as the Mayo Clinic, Harvard, and The New
York Times.
While Uber maintains it was due to human
error, a damning New
York Times report revealed the internal logs showed the system failed to recognize the traffic light, a significant technological issue to say the least.
And then there's The New
York Times, that sterling vanguard of journalistic glory whose delightful blend of gravitas and (unintentioned) hilarity should be the standard for how factual
error corrections ought to be done.
New
York hospitals and physicians are scrambling to meet a state mandate to electronically prescribe all medications, with some institutions asking for extra
time to comply with a 2012 law to curb prescription drug abuse, medical
errors and fraud.
For example, an explosive New
York Times article from July pointed out
errors in the ways officials at Hobart and William Smith Colleges judged an alleged incident at the Geneva schools.
Influential backers of Ohio Gov. John Kasich's New
York efforts say he's making a tactical
error by spending too much
time upstate and not enough
time in the city and the suburbs.
The New
York Times has even reported that the Equifax breach itself was caused by a lone employee's
error, according to the former CEO.
A research professor of education at New
York University, Ravitch recently published a book, Reign of
Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America's Public Schools — which argues that the crisis in American education is not a crisis of academic achievement, but of the destruction of public schools across the country — that landed in the number 10 spot on the New
York Times Best Seller list.
In an article titled «Right Answer, Wrong Score: Test Flaws Take Toll,» the Sunday New
York Times reported that exam manufacturers «can not guarantee the kind of
error - free, high - speed testing that parent, educators and politicians seem to take for granted.»
Leading up to the release of her new book, Reign of
Error, the New
York Times ran a profile today of Diane.
The new book by education historian and activist Diane Ravitch, Reign of
Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America's Public Schools, has debuted on The New
York Times bestseller list in the non-fiction hardback category at No. 10.
• Earlier this week, a Tweet from Rebecca Skloot prompted the New
York Times to issue a way - overdue correction to a 161 - year - old
error.
Enter New
York City: Jump off the plane at La Guardia, and within 48 hours of roaming on AT&T my BlackBerry Bold randomly rebooted itself 5
times, dropped 6 calls while talking (and 3 dropped after only one ring before I could answer) and at one point gave me an Invalid SIM Card
error for no reason at all (soft reboot fixed it).
Carl Richards, author of The One - Page Financial Plan and New
York Times contributor (and a generally great guy), coined a term for this persistent investment
error: the «behavior gap.»
«
Errors Cited in Assessing Climate Data,» The New
York Times, August 12, 2005.
The quote from the non-author caught the attention of New
York Times environmental writer Andrew Revkin, who submitted an
error report about it at MediaBugs, a nonpartisan site that helps get
errors in the news media corrected.
Evan Schaeffer, who was quoted in the piece, wrote that he was happy for the mention but noted Mr. Glater's
error: «Mentioned in The New
York Times... Which is cool, except that the writer got the facts wrong.
This increased attention included a Federal Trade Commission (FTC) report recommending regulations on data brokers, the FTC charging companies with alleged Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) violations, a National Consumer Law Center (NCLC) report on inaccurate background checks, two New
York Times editorials, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) increasing supervision of background checks, and an NBC Today Show report on background check
errors.