When journalists choose to be weak in the face of attacks on what they do, they encourage more attacks. The editor of the New York Times chooses a bended knee for his organization's non-response to Musk's provocations.
He embarrasses himself and his craft -- and leaves both weaker for the battles ahead.
https://www.axios.com/2023/04/15/nyt-editor-says-paper-wont-lead-the-boycott-of-twitter
BTW Kahn's response to the question is a deliberate non-sequitur. NO ONE is asking the Times to "lead a boycott" of Saudi-government-financed Twitter (even though that would be a great move).
We're simply asking the Times to stop pouring its work and money into a business run by someone who hates journalism and who promotes people who want to bring down democracy -- and finally recognize the danger of centralized control of speech.
@dangillmor This is the same paper that identified Hitler's antisemitism as a political trick, not something he'd actually follow through on.
You'd wish in 100 years they'd have learned their lesson, but if the editorial control has passed from one same-voiced soul to the next, it's about what we should expect.