Technologies
Today’s NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for Dec. 4, #437
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Dec. 4, No. 437.

Looking for the most recent regular Connections answers? Click here for today’s Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle and Strands puzzles.
Today’s Connections: Sports Edition is a tough one. Movie buffs, you might do well. If you’re struggling with today’s puzzle but still want to solve it, read on for hints and the answers.
Connections: Sports Edition is published by The Athletic, the subscription-based sports journalism site owned by The Times. It doesn’t appear in the NYT Games app, but it does in The Athletic’s own app. Or you can play it for free online.
Read more: NYT Connections: Sports Edition Puzzle Comes Out of Beta
Hints for today’s Connections: Sports Edition groups
Here are four hints for the groupings in today’s Connections: Sports Edition puzzle, ranked from the easiest yellow group to the tough (and sometimes bizarre) purple group.
Yellow group hint: Fire it in there.
Green group hint: Signal callers.
Blue group hint: Ohio teams.
Purple group hint: Enjoy the show.
Answers for today’s Connections: Sports Edition groups
Yellow group: Members of a pitching staff.
Green group: Descriptors often applied to QBs.
Blue group: Members of the Cleveland Cavaliers.
Purple group: Last words in football movies.
Read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: Here Are the Most Popular Letters Used in English Words
What are today’s Connections: Sports Edition answers?
The yellow words in today’s Connections
The theme is members of a pitching staff. The four answers are ace, closer, long reliever and setup man.
The green words in today’s Connections
The theme is descriptors often applied to QBs. The four answers are dual-threat, game manager, mobile and pocket passer.
The blue words in today’s Connections
The theme is members of the Cleveland Cavaliers. The four answers are Garland, Hunter, Mitchell and Mobley.
The purple words in today’s Connections
The theme is last words in football movies. The four answers are Giants, Lights, Replacements and Sunday.
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Technologies
Prices Set by Algorithms: New Yorkers Now See Warnings About Stores Using Personal Data to Set Costs
This new law, already subject to lawsuits, lets shoppers know when companies are quietly raising online prices for certain types of customers.
Online shoppers in New York are now seeing a new warning on product pages thanks to consumer protection legislation that took effect in early November. Particularly noticeable during Black Friday sales were messages that told shoppers: «This price was set by an algorithm using your personal data.»
This piece of legislation requires companies (with exceptions for rideshare apps) to show buyers when they use surveillance pricing to set online prices, potentially raising costs for some people while lowering them for others.
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So what data are these companies collecting to shift prices? Well, unlike surge pricing, this type of algorithm pricing calculates data related to the individual person or device. That could include the type of device (Android versus iPhone, etc.), your account’s browsing history, recent purchases made from that browser and — most importantly — your location.
In other words, reported examples have shown that items like eggs will increase in cost for wealthy neighborhoods while staying at lower standard costs for less prosperous zones. But it can get far more complicated than that: Some pricing algorithms study millions of online purchases to predict buyer patterns.
A representative for the New York Senate didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Is surveillance pricing legal?
So far, yes. What laws like this New York legislation do is enforce transparency about what may be affecting prices, instead of banning it. And even that was too much for business groups, which immediately sued to block the law in federal court, alleging that it violates the businesses’ First Amendment rights.
It’s not clear whether companies are complying with the law as directed, or what it fully entails, either. The bill requires «clear and conspicuous disclosure» near the price, but some companies appear to be putting the information in a harder-to-spot area behind an information icon at the bottom of a pop-up.
Efforts to control pricing via algorithm
New York isn’t the only state to tackle surveillance pricing. Other states and cities are entertaining similar legislation, as well as complete bans on the practice. But it’s an uphill battle due to the many details and strong pushback from, well, every industry that sells products online.
The most recent example was from September, when California’s congress went through its proposed ban on surveillance pricing and cut out nearly everything. In its current state, the California law would only apply to grocery prices, which is still not a common online purchase. Colorado, Illinois and other states are also working on their own versions of related laws.
The question of whether shoppers would appreciate transparency laws, or whether they’d be less likely to purchase products if they knew the price was based on their personal data, is tough to answer (what if the algorithms are giving you a lower price than other nearby shoppers?). But the privacy question has a more far-reaching impact: Once shoppers see how much of their personal data is being harvested for pricing, they may start to wonder what else it’s being used for.
Technologies
Spotify Wrapped Is Live, Try the Buzzy New Party Game
Wrapped Party and your listening age are the big new features of the music streamer’s yearly wrapper.
Music streaming service Spotify has unveiled new features in its 2025 Wrapped listener recap, including a party game and the most popular albums, at an event in New York City.
Spotify Wrapped is one of the biggest events in the year’s music calendar, and 2025 promises to be even bigger, thanks in part to the new game. Wrapped Party is Spotify’s first multiplayer game included in Wrapped, allowing you to compete against up to nine friends with questions based on your listening habits.
Also read: Best Music Streaming Services
Matthew Luhks, Spotify’s senior director of global marketing, said the new game is the Wrapped feature he’s most excited about.
«I think Wrapped Party is amazing, and it’s something we’ve been talking about for years. Wrapped is usually a solo experience, and now you can play Wrapped with your friends and your family,» Luhks said at the event.
Wrapped Party is one of almost a dozen new features for the company’s viral wrap-up, which also includes your Listening Age (giving this writer an age of 100!) and Top Artist Sprint, which shows your favorite artist listens «racing» over twelve months. This year is also the first time that the recap highlights a user’s most popular albums.
Read more: Spotify Says I Have the Music Taste of a 79-Year-Old: Is That Bad?
Meanwhile, the new Clubs feature assigns you, Harry Potter sorting hat-style, to one of six fan clubs based on your listening and designates you a role such as «Archivist.»
As with every year, the company also revealed its most popular content across all categories for 2025. After six years in a row, it was no surprise that Joe Rogan had the platform’s most popular podcast, but the biggest upset was when Bad Bunny pipped Taylor Swift for most popular global artist. However, Swift was the most popular artist in the US for 2025.
Other popular categories included:
- Global top song: Die With A Smile by Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars
- Global top album: DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS by Bad Bunny
- Top Audiobook in Premium: Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
To access Spotify Wrapped, look for the Wrapped feed on the Home tab. To find Wrapped Party, just search for it in Spotify or access it at the end of your personalized wrap.
In 2025, almost every streaming service has its own yearly stats roundup, including YouTube’s new Recap feature, but Spotify Wrapped is still arguably the most famous.
Spotify is the most popular music streaming service, with over 100 million tracks, and it currently costs $12 a month for Premium (including audiobooks). The company is rumored to be planning a price increase in early 2026, however.
Technologies
SpaceX Gets OK to Build 2 Starship Launch Pads at NASA’s Cape Canaveral
The two Super Heavy launch pads will join one that SpaceX already has at Kennedy Space Center’s Launch Complex 39-A.
SpaceX has been granted approval to build two launch pads at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station’s Space Launch Complex 37 in Florida, the company said Monday. These pads are built for launches from heavier rockets like SpaceX’s megarocket, Starship. SpaceX’s Starship can produce more than 16 million pounds of thrust from its Super Heavy reusable first stage rockets. By contrast, NASA’s Space Launch System is capable of approximately 8.8 million pounds of thrust.
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The two launch pads join SpaceX’s existing launch pad at the Kennedy Space Center’s Launch Complex 39-A, which was designed to support the iconic Apollo program.
«With three launch pads in Florida, Starship will be ready to support America’s national security and Artemis goals as the world’s premiere spaceport continues to evolve to enable airport-like operations,» SpaceX said Monday in a post on X. The company also announced that construction has already begun on the two new launch pads.
A decision two years in the making
SpaceX has been waiting almost two years for regulatory approval to build its launch pads at Space Launch Complex 37. During that time, SpaceX had to field several public hearings and investigations to ensure that the Starship launches wouldn’t pose a threat to the local fauna or flora.
Once completed, the two new launch pads will be able to host approximately 76 Starship missions and 152 landings per year, with 44 additional launches and 88 additional landings from SpaceX’s Kennedy Space Center launch pad.
One of the major questions for these launch pads is how they could impact local travel, namely in terms of commercial airline flights.
According to regulatory filings, 120 launches and 240 landings could cause delays for thousands of commercial airline flights annually. The Air Force plans to reassess airspace concerns before giving final approval for Starship launches.
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