đ Gas prices spooked by a strike
Plus: Hello Nasdaq, itâs Arm.

Good morning, Quartz readers!
Suggested Reading
Hereâs what you need to know
European gas prices rose on fears of a looming strike in Australia. If workers at the North West Shelf liquid natural gas plant donât reach an agreement on pay, it could affect global supply.
Related Content
Arm filed for a Nasdaq listing. The UK-based chipmaker, owned by Japan-based SoftBank, has yet to provide an estimated share price. Its move to go public comes amid a particularly long dry spell for IPOs.
Tesla said its cyber breach was an insider job. The electric vehicle maker is suing two former staffers for leaking data linked to 75,000 employees and users.
The worldâs largest pizza chain is closing 142 stores across Russia. DP Eurasia, Dominoâs Russian franchise holder, is declaring bankruptcy, further cementing Russiaâs economic isolation.
Meet the Pyxis Ocean, the shipping industryâs greener vessel

Whatâs that you say? A cargo ship that isnât a dirty oil guzzler? And one with a name and technology reminiscent of The Legend of Zelda?
The first vessel of its kind to be retrofitted with WindWings, the Pyxis Ocean set sail from China with the lofty goal of helping the maritime industry decarbonize. Take a look at its maiden voyage, by the digits:
30%: Average reduction in fuel consumption and CO2 emissions with WindWings
AI companies are too cheap to pay for books
Big Tech has a habit of pinching pennies wherever people can be exploited, and now companies like Meta and OpenAI are using pirated books to train their artificial intelligence models.
A new study published in the Atlantic revealed how tech companies use books from shadow libraries, paying nothing for the content that trains and powers their large language models. Itâs a shady practice that only adds to Big Techâs history of using cheap contentâand laborâto boost its profits.
Quartzâs most popular
đ A $40,000 Nvidia chip has become the worldâs most sought-after hardware
Surprising discoveries
The man who voices Mario is retiring. After 27 years, itâs finally time for him to say, âItâs-a me, Charles Martinet.â
Germanyâs raccoons love beer. So much so, theyâre raiding homes for bevies.
The wealthiest 10% of Americans are responsible for 40% of the countryâs greenhouse gas emissions. Not even the Pyxis Ocean can fix that one.
The biggest search for the Loch Ness monster in 50 years is about to kick off. Enthusiasts will be armed with drones and underwater acoustic devices, which have never been used to look for the mythical beast.
No one can take selfies at Chicagoâs âBeanâ statue until 2024. The No. 1 attraction in the Midwest needs a little R&Râdoes this mean Nessie selfies could become less rare than Bean selfies?
Our best wishes for a productive day. Send any news, comments, Nessie pics, and rare Bean sightings to [email protected]. Reader support makes Quartz available to allâbecome a member. Todayâs Daily Brief was brought to you by Morgan Haefner.