We've raised $65 billion in Series H funding at a $965 billion post-money valuation, led by @AltimeterCap, Dragoneer, @Greenoaks, and @sequoia.
This investment will help us advance our research and expand our capacity to meet growing demand for Claude.
Big (er) News: India's Infant Mortality Rate has dropped to a record low as per the latest SRS report from RGI.
IMR in 2023: 25
IMR in 2013: 40
This is extremely heartening!
Apple CEO Tim Cook gifted US President Donald Trump a US-made engraved souvenir with a 24-karat gold base, as the company presented Apple's announcement of an additional $100 billion investment in US manufacturing https://t.co/AdUAI3G88B
India's popular Unified Payments Interface (UPI) is inching closer to surpassing global payments giant Visa's daily transaction volume, which will make it the largest retail interbank payment settlement platform in the world.
UPI, the world's largest retail real-time payments system, recorded 644 million transactions on June 1 and 650 million the next day.
Visa processed an average of 639 million daily transactions during FY24. It does not share daily transaction data.
The average daily volume of UPI was 602 million in May, whereas Visa's average daily transactions in the March quarter – the latest available data – were 674 million.
UPI recorded 630 million daily transactions in the first few days of May but grew to 640-650 million in June.
🚨 Trump on India-Pakistan: “Maybe we could even get them to have a nice dinner together, Marco. Wouldn’t that be nice?” He added, “We reached a historic ceasefire a few days ago—millions could have died in a conflict between India and Pakistan.”
“Bahawalpur.”
I still have chills in my heart from when I first heard that town’s name in late January 2002. For the 23 years since, I have reported on how Pakistani intelligence and military leaders have used that city — Bahawalpur — in the southern province of Punjab as a base for its homegrown domestic terrorists.
When I heard India bombed training camps in Pakistan this week in Operation Sindoor, in response to a Pakistani terrorist rampage in India’s Kashmir state, I had one city’s name on my lips: Bahawalpur.
Did India bomb Bahawalpur?
It did. I knew then India was striking actual hubs for Pakistan’s homegrown domestic terrorism.
Why do I know?
My friend, WSJ reporter Danny Pearl, went to Bahawalpur in December 2001 with a notebook and a pen. Gen. Pervez Musharraf had just promised he was shutting down Pakistan’s militant groups after a strike by Pakistan’s terrorists against the Parliament in India, and Danny reported on the militant offices in Bahawalpur.
He literally knocked on their doors. Dear Dr. @yudapearl, this story is a window into Danny’s reporting enterprise. And because people will wonder: Danny was no cowboy. This was a calculated low-risk reporting trip because no journalist had been targeted for kidnapping in Pakistan. Around that time, Danny sent me an email: “I’m anxious to go to Afghanistan, but I’m not anxious to die.”
What did Danny learn?
The militant training camps were open for business in Bahawalpur.
On Jan. 23, 2002, Danny left a home I had rented in Karachi, Pakistan, for an interview.
I learned Danny’s fixer, Asif Farooqi, had arranged an interview for Danny through a man named “Arif.” Danny didn’t know it but Arif was the PR man for a militant group, Harkutul Mujahadeen. What was Arif’s hometown? Bahawalpur.
The police launched a manhunt to find Arif in Bahawalpur. We learned Arif’s family faked a funeral for Arif. Police found him trying to board a bus in Muzaffarabad, across the country by Pakistan’s border with Kashmir.
It is another town India said it bombed terrorist training facilities.
Arif had handed Danny off to Omar Sheikh,a British-Pakistani dropout from the London School of Economics, radicalized in the 1990s in London mosques. He went to Pakistan to train in these militant training camps. Then he kidnapped tourists in India. He was caught and jailed but on Dec. 31, 1999, he was traded for hostages in the hijacking of Indian Airlines Flight 814.
Omar Sheikh was freed with Pakistani terrorist leader Masood Azhar, whose family was allegedly killed this week by India’s air strike in Bahawalpur.
Did Pakistan jail Omar Sheikh and Masood Azhar when they returned to Pakistan with a third terrorist, freed from India’s jails?
No. Pakistan’s military and intelligence gave them safe passage. They used them as weapons against India. But in fact these domestic terrorists have waged war against innocents in Pakistan, like civil society activists, Benazir Bhutto, Punjab Governor Salman Taseer, schoolchildren and countless others.
Their extremism has ruined Pakistan, and Pakistanis can’t blame America for creating the mujahideen to fight the Soviets in the 1980s.
Pakistan has had a duty to dismantle those terrorist bases — for even the safety of its own people. What India is doing is a strategic attack on terrorist bases Pakistani military and intelligence should have eliminated but never did in their obsession to take over Kashmir.
You will see parallels in the propaganda messages against India and Israel. Like Hamas, Pakistani terrorists crossed a border to kill. Now, Pakistani propagandists call themselves victims of their “fascist” “colonizer” neighbor.
It’s the Reverse Uno strategy of moral inversion, just like @stoolpresidente got from the Temple student who won’t take responsibility for promoting the “HATE THE JEWS” sign. Don’t fall for it. Nations, communities and people must own up to their extremism, from Bahawalpur to beyond.
CONGRATULATIONS TO GUKESH, THE NEW WORLD CHAMPION 🏆
The 18-year-old Indian star has defeated the reigning champion, Ding Liren, to become the youngest-ever undisputed classical chess world champion. Wow! 🇮🇳
Nobel Physics Prize winner Geoff Hinton's middle name is Everest.
It comes from his great-great-granduncle Sir George Everest, once British surveyor-general of India, after whom Mount Everest was named.
Talk about lofty family expectations.
What an incredible feat!
Elon Musk is everywhere these days.. from making an impact in US elections to making futuristic cars and this amazingly cool rocket.
10 years on, SBM has turned out to be a truly transformative initiaitive. And perhaps one of Modi's most uncelebrated achievements.
60,000-70,000 infant deaths averted every year - this coming from Nature, one of the most imp scientific journals
https://t.co/ds4qDVNxI8
Fantastic report by @DhingraSanya on the bureaucracy’s opposition to Modi’s lateral entry. Remember all jobs Joint Secretary & above are EX CADRE - which means the government is under no compulsion to appoint a UPSC grad
https://t.co/uGF4bvdMSq