But I’ve got a New York Times Digital Access invite with your name on it…) (Dear Colin Firth: You don’t know me, and we’re not related. Which is curious, since the invite page uses a text field that could be filled in with the name and email address of anyone, family or no. Click on the link included in the email, and you’re sent to a “Share All Digital Access” page that, though fairly sparse, repeats the term “family member” three times.Īnd in the Shared Access FAQ, the “family member” count jumps to seven. “Now you can share your All Digital Access with a family member at no additional charge,” the email says. As of today, the Times stresses, digital subscribers can share digital access with a family member - not a friend, not a coworker, not an acquaintance, but an actual relative. (I’m sure the Times would love nothing more than to spark a few intra-family squabbles over who gets to share Mom’s digital access.)Īnd its language announcing the new policy bears that out. So while today’s share-a-subscription move may be a way, of course, for the Times to collect more email addresses and other user data, and to build its user base, and to encourage Times subscribers to sync up their print and their digital accounts…it’s a move that also seems aimed at recapturing some of the communal aspects of paper subscription and consumption - just on a digital plane. Digital subscriptions, with their logic of one-subscription-per-person, reframed that community ethos: When the paper rolled out its pay meter, its core consumer became the individual, not the group. In print, a family was able to share the paper among husband and wife, son and daughter - maybe even with a neighbor. That $35 top-tier item has always seemed a little high next to its peers, and bringing this sharing mechanism only to those subscribers could give another reason for some to pony up.īut, more interestingly, the move shifts the calculus of the NYT’s porous paywall, for which the locus of subscription has been a single person. For one thing, it’s another way for the Times to differentiate its price points, which for digital-only are currently $15 for web and smartphone app, $20 for web and tablet app, or $35 for web, smartphone, and tablet. (The Times is also offering the deal to digital-only types who subscribe to the most expensive, $35-every-four-weeks package.) Think of it as the Frank Rich Discount, bring-a-plus-one edition. If you currently have an active paid account with the New York Times paired with your email address, you can not register for an institutional subscription to the New York Times with out first canceling your existing subscription.Are you a New York Times subscriber? Are you related to one? If so, today’s your lucky day: The Times, in an email just sent out to print subscribers, is announcing that subscribers will now be able to share their digital access with a family member of their choosing. See more help information about the Academic Pass subscription model. Reactivating: After a year’s time, you may need to reactivate your NYT “pass” while using a device on the Macalester network. After registration you can now visit or use the NYT app from any location.Create a new account using your email address, or link your existing free account by logging in.While connected to the Macalester network, visit and select “Macalester College”.This means that you have access to the contents of the New York Times without purchasing a separate subscription. Macalester College has an institutional subscription to the New York Times, courtesy of MCSG.
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