Full-Time
Posted on 7/30/2025
Subscription-based journalism and analysis publisher
$87k - $100k/yr
New York, NY, USA
In Person
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The Atlantic provides in-depth journalism and analysis on politics, culture, and global issues across print, digital, and audio formats. It earns money through subscriptions, advertising, and sponsored content. Content is produced by in-house journalists and contributors and published on its site and app, with formats including articles, podcasts, audio stories, and crosswords. Its goal is to deliver thoughtful, high-quality journalism that informs and challenges readers while sustaining independent reporting through subscriptions and partnerships, differentiating itself by a mix of long-form reporting and varied formats.
Company Size
501-1,000
Company Stage
N/A
Total Funding
N/A
Headquarters
Washington DC, District of Columbia
Founded
1857
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Flexible Work Hours
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Professional Development Budget
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Paid Sick Leave
Paid Vacation
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Atlantic mag sues Google, accusing tech giant of rigging digital ad market. By Ariel Zilber Publication Date: 2026-01-14 20:28:00 The Atlantic has filed suit against Google - accusing the tech giant of monopolizing the digital advertising market in a legal battle that pits a Silicon Valley colossus against one of the oldest magazines in the country. The mag alleged that Google and its parent Alphabet have rigged the digital market through secret auction schemes, an antitrust violation known as "tying" and deceptive practices that siphoned millions in revenue from publishers - helping cement the company's monopoly over the online ad economy. "These allegations are meritless," a Google spokesperson told The Post. "Advertisers and publishers have many choices and when they choose Google's ad tech tools it's because they are effective, affordable and easy to use." The 94-page complaint was filed in Manhattan federal court. The...
Newsletter Signup - Under Article / In Page"*" indicates required fields CRISPR-Cas9 is one of the biggest discoveries of the 21st century. Since it was developed in 2012, this gene-editing tool has revolutionized biology research, making it easier to study disease and faster to discover drugs. The technology is also significantly impacting the development of crops, foods, and industrial fermentation processes.The one application that has made it famous is the modification of the human genome, which brings the promise of using CRISPR to cure diseases. Since 2012, a lot has happened and drug candidates have progressed so far that one has even reached approval. So while scientists keep venturing into tweaking our DNA, it is worth taking the time to fully understand what CRISPR is, and what the actual benefits and possibilities are.First of all, what is CRISPR-Cas9?CRISPR is short for ‘clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats.’ The term refers to a series of repetitive patterns in the DNA of bacteria and archaea that were extensively researched by Spanish scientist Francis Mojica in the ‘90s. These patterns are the basis of a primitive immune system that bacteria use to ‘remember’ the DNA of viral invaders by incorporating the DNA sequence of the virus within the CRISPR patterns. The Cas9 protein is then able to recognize the DNA sequence stored within CRISPR patterns and cut any DNA molecules with a matching sequence.But it wasn’t until 2012 that Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier took the discovery a step further and proposed that CRISPR-Cas9 could be used to cut any desired DNA sequence by just providing it with the right template
In 2022 and in 2023, The Atlantic received the National Magazine Award for General Excellence from the American Society of Magazine Editors, the top award in the industry.
The Atlantic is partnering with PBS NewsHour and WETA on a rebranding of the weekly program Washington Week, effective August 11.
Our parent publication Adweeknamed him publishing editor of the year in 2020, and The Atlantic was also named magazine of the year.