Venezuela Uprising Protests erupted yesterday against the government of Nicolas Maduro, and opposition-leader-slash-self-proclaimed-president Juan Guaido claimed Maduro had lost control of his armed forces. However, there's little indication that the army is behind Guaido now, and Maduro is claiming he thwarted an attempted coup—a characterization the U.S. has denied. CNBC Mueller Complaint Special counsel Robert Mueller was not happy with how Attorney General William Barr characterized his Trump report in that initial four-page summary, which failed to mention how strong the evidence was that the president obstructed justice. Mueller wrote Barr in a letter that the memo "did not fully capture the context, nature, and substance" of his report. Washington Post Huawei's "Backdoor" Vodafone has hit back hard against the Bloomberg piece we mentioned yesterday, which said the telecoms firm found backdoors in the Huawei equipment it was using eight to 10 years ago. The "backdoors" were actually routine mechanisms for diagnostic testing during installation and, while Vodafone made Huawei take them out, they did not risk giving Huawei "unauthorized access to the carrier's fixed-line network in Italy." The Register Biometric Database The EU is about to create one of the world's largest biometric databases by consolidating biometric data that covers asylum seekers, foreign visitors, criminals and missing people. That means visitors from the U.S. will need to submit to a biometrics check before leaving. Technologists and privacy advocates are worried about the potential for hacks or leaks. Fortune This edition of CEO Daily was edited by David Meyer. Find previous editions here, and sign up for other Fortune newsletters here. |
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