NYT has a public api that can be used to track some so-called "stealth edits". Full text is not supported, but the API has endpoints that provide headlines, abstracts, lead paragraphs, and article word counts.
Everything should work. Headlines that do not appear to have changed are resulting in different MD5 hashes and being duplicated in database. I will fix that at some point.
- why are some articles/edits missing?
- The tracker uses the Archive endpoint, which is only updated three times per day (around 3:30PT, 11:30PT, and 19:30PT). Articles can be published and edited before the tracker sees them. If you do not like this, build your own. It takes like 15 minutes.
article info:
- article_id
- 2b71b83c-637b-5c73-8706-8e34d5f646b4
- pub_date
- 2024-03-27 02:01:03
- section_name
- Opinion
- document_type
- article
- web_uri
- https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/27/opinion/sat-act-college.html
history:
version: 2024-03-27 11:45:07
How the SAT Changed My Life
Wednesday, March 27, 2024
For a disadvantaged kid like me, the SAT was the one shot I had to prove my potential.
This month, the University of Texas at Austin joined the wave of selective universities reversing Covid era test-optional admissions policies, once again requiring students to submit ACT or SAT scores.
word count: 1080
version: 2024-03-27 19:45:11
How the SAT Changed My Life
Wednesday, March 27, 2024
For a disadvantaged kid like me, the SAT was the one shot I had to prove my potential.
This month, the University of Texas, Austin, joined the wave of selective schools reversing Covid-era test-optional admissions policies, once again requiring applicants to submit ACT or SAT scores.
word count: 1077
version: 2024-03-28 03:45:06
How the SAT Changed My Life
Wednesday, March 27, 2024
For a disadvantaged kid like me, the SAT was the one shot I had to prove my potential.
This month, the University of Texas, Austin, joined the wave of selective schools reversing Covid-era test-optional admissions policies, once again requiring applicants to submit ACT or SAT scores.
word count: 1076
archives:
check archive.today for copies of this article.
check archive.org wayback machine for copies of this article.