Putin demanded a surrender before Russia stops attacking Mariupol
Attacks on Ukrainian cities have intensified, and Russia appears to not be backing down.

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The US chief strategist for sanctions against Russia is visiting India. His meetings come one day ahead of Russia’s foreign minister Sergei Lavrov’s trip to Delhi, during which Lavrov is expected to broach the topic of selling India discounted oil.
Putin won’t stop bombing Mariupol until the city surrenders. But, the Russian president might be misinformed about the situation in Ukraine. Meanwhile, the Georgian region of South Ossetia wants to join Russia.
Russia won’t change its gas prices, but it will demand payment in rubles. It’s a strategy to minimize the impact of sanctions. European countries have rejected the idea, and Germany and Austria started taking steps towards gas rationing.
Apple and Meta were hoodwinked by hackers. User data was obtained through fake legal requests, and might be used for financial fraud.
Meta paid a Republican consulting firm to convince the US that TikTok is dangerous for children. The campaign spread misinformation about the origin and effect of some social media trends.
Google’s sister company Waymo is putting driverless cars in San Francisco. The rides are free, but only available to Waymo’s employees.
What to watch for
Today is the deadline for Northern Ireland’s government to provide abortion services. Abortion became legal in the country in October 2019, and the UK mandated that Northern Ireland’s Department of Health fully commission abortion services by Mar. 31, 2022.
The region will miss the deadline, leaving the provision of the service to the occasional initiative of individual doctors, and forcing many of those seeking abortions to obtain it outside the country. But the UK government is stepping in, planning to use its full power to override local authorities and speeding up the process of setting up abortion services. At a time when anti-abortion measures are cropping up elsewhere, too—notably the US—the Northern Ireland case shows how fragile reproductive care can be, when even an abortion-permitting legal framework fails to actually permit abortion.
Why do the splits?
Earlier this week, Tesla announced that it will split its stock for the second time in two years, following similar plans by Amazon and Alphabet. The move will lower share price—or appear to, anyway. In reality, the stock will be split up into smaller shares, making it easier to invest.
This is a marketing move, designed to make a company’s stock more enticing to retail investors who feel uneasy about buying fractions of a share of stock—and research shows it actually works. Tesla should know; the automaker has done it once before, a 5-for-1 split in August 2020 that doubled net stock purchases within weeks. It’s already a darling with retail investors, who own 39% of the company, much more than they do Meta or Alphabet (though nowhere near as much as GameStop, of course).

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Surprising discoveries
Putin may be cracking—it’s in his voice. Analysis of voice samples from the Russian leader’s speeches in the past two months suggest his confident exterior might be hiding growing stress.
Chile is the hottest new destination for Indian startup founders. Tech expertise, government support, and market size are attracting investors.
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Pigs have a lot to say, and we might be close to understanding it. Researchers were able to classify domestic pig calls from birth to slaughter based on their emotional value.
Solar and wind energy powered 10% of global electricity in 2021. This is a new milestone in the use of renewable sources, but coal use rose too.
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