The Wall Street Journal is a daily financial newspaper that is based in New York and owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp.
The Journal is the second-largest U.S. newspaper, with more than 2.2 million in combined print and digital daily circulation as of 2014 and an editorial staff of about 1,800. It has long been considered the nation’s top newspaper for financial and business news.
Launched in 1889, the Journal is the flagship publication of the Dow Jones Co., a subsidiary of News Corp. The Journal also publishes Asian and European editions.
The Wall Street Journal’s website has been primarily restricted to paying customers since it was launched in 1995.
Currently, some of the site’s features are available to anyone, but access to the entire site is limited to online subscribers who pay about $2 per week. In 2010, the Journal reported 414,000 paid subscribers to its website and other e-editions on its mobile devices, making it possibly the largest paid-subscription news site on the Internet. In 2011, the Journal reported adding 200,000 subscribers on mobile devices, such as Apple’s iPad and Amazon’s Kindle. As of 2013, the Journal had 917,000 digital subscribers, accounting for about 40% of its total circulation. The paper joined Apple’s in-app Newsstand subscription service in 2012.