The
New
York
Times’
tech
employees,
who
are
behind
Wordle
and
Connections
among
other
games
and
features,
will
go
back
to
work
on
Tuesday
following
a
weeklong
strike.
In
a
statement
published
on
Monday,
the
New
York
Times
Tech
Guild
said
union
members
will
“march
into
the
office
together
in
the
morning
as
a
symbol
of
what’s
to
come
for
The
Times.”
The
Tech
Guild
represents
the
over
600
workers
who
manage
technology
across
the
digital
paper.
Union
members
went
on
strike
the
day
before
the
US
election,
raising
concerns
about
whether
the
NYT’s
vote-tracking
tech,
like
the
Needle,
would
hold
up
on
Election
Day.
The
union
and
the
NYT
will
continue
negotiating
on
a
contract.
“The
systems
and
digital
products
that
worked
over
the
election
did
so
thanks
to
the
hundreds
of
unit
members
who
worked
for
months
preparing
everything
to
run
smoothly,”
Kathy
Zhang,
New
York
Times
Tech
Guild
unit
chair
said.
“What
broke
down
during
this
strike
broke
because
our
members
weren’t
at
work.”
The
Tech
Guild
says
its
work
stoppage
impacted
the
NYT’s
election
coverage
in
a
few
ways:
the
outlet
didn’t
display
state-level
or
non-presidential
needles,
for
instance,
while
its
app
and
website
“were
slow
to
load.”
Last
week,
Business
Insider
reported
that
around
100
tech
workers
crossed
the
picket
line
on
Election
Day.
Now
that
the
strike
is
over,
the
Tech
Guild
says
supporters
can
resume
playing
the
NYT’s
games
and
using
the
Cooking
app.
The
union
previously
asked
people
to
avoid
playing
any
of
the
NYT’s
daily
puzzle
games,
and
it
instead
directed
users
to
the
games
striking
workers
created
on
a
separate
website.
“We
look
forward
to
continuing
to
work
with
Tech
Guild
to
reach
a
fair
contract
that
takes
into
account
that
they
are
already
among
the
highest
paid
individual
contributors
in
the
Company
and
journalism
is
our
top
priority,”
NYT
spokesperson
Danielle
Rhoades
Ha
said
in
an
emailed
statement
to
The
Verge.
She
also
noted
that
the
publication
saw
“our
smoothest
site
performance
during
an
election
ever”
and
that
“site
performance
was
due
in
large
part
to
the
election
readiness
work
of
the
Tech
Guild
unit
members
and
others
across
the
company in
the
months
leading
up
to
the
election.”
Update,
November
11th:
Added
further
information
from
the
NYT.
(Originally posted by Emma Roth)
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