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Amazon manipulated search results and copied products to boost sales in India. Internal documents reviewed by Reuters show the e-commerce giant used data to promote its own goods over Indian sellers. Amazon denies the accusations.
The EU will end most checks on British goods heading to Northern Ireland. The proposal would scrap 80% of spot checks and require half the usual paperwork.
The US is expanding hours at the Port of Los Angeles. The Biden administration hopes extra shifts will remedy supply chain clogs that are hindering the countryâs post-pandemic economic recovery.
Moderna or Pfizer boosters may be better for Johnson & Johnson vaccine recipients. The finding, from preliminary data based on a small study, comes as a US Food and Drug Administration panel votes on whether to recommend authorization for J&Jâs booster Friday.
Consumer prices rose higher than expected in September. The Consumer Price Index climbed 0.4% from the previous month, as food and housing grew costlier. The Fed is planning to taper off its stimulus starting November, reducing its purchases of securities by about $15 billion a month.
Captain Kirk returned to space. William Shatner, who played Kirk on the original âStar Trekâ series, hitched a ride on a Blue Origin rocket. Shatner, at 90, became the oldest human being to have visited space.
What to watch for
Markets react after China published its September inflation figures today, with both producer inflation and the consumer price index (CPI) rising. China rebounded strongly from the pandemic, but growth is slowing as the country grapples with turmoil in its property sector and a power crunch.
đ CPI, which measures changes in the price of consumer goods and services, rose 0.7%.
đ PPI (producer price index) inflation, which shows changes in so-called factory gate pricesâthatâs the price of goods before they leave the facility and go on their merry wayâsoared 10.7% compared to a year ago. Surging commodity prices have been hurting production.
đ Chinaâs September trade data published yesterday presented a mixed picture with export growth unexpectedly accelerating, while imports lagged behind expectations.
The UK has more job vacancies than ever before
Northern Ireland border checks arenât the only Brexit headache the UK is (still) dealing with. The country has a record-high number of unfilled jobsâthere were more than 1.1 million job vacancies in July through September of this yearâand businesses blame the messy divorce from the EU.

While the UK government has tried to play down Brexitâs impact on staffing shortages, one in four businesses struggling to hire said that a reduced number of EU applicants was a factor, the UK Office for National Statistics reported. In the transport and storage sector, almost half (46%) said it was a factor.
Mindbody booked an appointment with ClassPass
Wellness appointment-booking software company Mindbody announced yesterday itâs acquiring ClassPass, the fitness subscription startup. The easing of pandemic restrictions has more people thinking about heading back to the gym, and with plenty of companies desperate for their business, it makes sense for ClassPass to find a partner to help cut costs and scale.
Recently, we asked ClassPass CEO Fritz Lanman who he feels are the companyâs primary competitors:
SoulCycle: People love the mantra-driven, cult-like cycling business, which is owned by Equinox and valued at more than $900 million, in part for its strong community.
Peloton: As more people turn to working from home, cycling on a $2,000 bike at home sounds more appealing than ever.
Netflix: ClassPass sees âNetflix and chillâ as a threat to working out (which, same).
Airbnb: With the short-term rental company building up its experiences business, Airbnb could come into competition with ClassPass.
Dive deeper into the future of fitness with the ClassPass Company email, exclusive to Quartz members. ⌠Exercise your brain with a subscription to Quartzâsign up today and get 40% off with code QZEMAIL40.
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đą Prince Harry and Meghan Markle the ESGâs latest celebrity ambassadors
đĄ Investors still favor male startup founders in Africa by a wide margin
Surprising discoveries
Weâre being unfair to spiders. Humans tend to feel a lot better about killing things when their faces donât look remotely like ours.
A meteorite woke up a Canadian woman by crashing onto her pillow. Sheâs letting scientists do their thing for a while, but then she plans on keeping it.
Something in the galaxyâs center is sending out very unusual radio waves. It doesnât match the behavior of known celestial objects, so weâre sure everything is probably 100% fine.
Conjoined turtle twins were found in Massachusetts. Each of their two heads controls three legs, and they swim and come up for air together.
If a flatworm wants a twin, it just rips itself in half. The piece without the brain grows a new oneâand everything else it needs.
Our best wishes for a productive day. Send any news, comments, galactic guesses, and spider friends to hi@qz.com. Get the most out of Quartz by downloading our iOS app and becoming a member. Todayâs Daily Brief was brought to you by Jane Li, Cassie Werber, Michelle Cheng, Morgan Haefner, Susan Howson, Liz Webber, and Samanth Subramanian.