TOP NEWS
Amazon Antitrust
The Journal is reporting that Amazon tweaked its product-search system to potentially favor its own brands. The internally controversial change apparently promotes the visibility of the products that are the most profitable for Amazon, rather than those that are most relevant to users. If so, this will be of intense interest to antitrust regulators in the U.S. and EU, where Amazon's stewardship of its marketplace is already under scrutiny. WSJ
WeWork IPO
Are you by now begging for the tedious saga that is the WeWork IPO to just end already please? Sorry—it's being delayed until… sometime, probably by the end of the year, thanks to a lack of investor enthusiasm. Financial Times
Attack Attribution
President Trump has accused Iran of probably being behind the drone attacks on Saudi oil facilities, but said he's in no hurry to respond. Trump: "That was a very large attack and it could be met with an attack many, many times larger very easily by our country, but we are going to find out who definitively did it first." CNBC
Japan Deal
President Trump says the U.S. has reached a trade deal with Japan that will not require congressional approval. However, it's not yet clear whether this agreement will ward off Trump's threatened tariffs on Japanese cars and car parts. Reuters
What's Driving Data?
An increasing number of companies are storing their data in the cloud, while, at the same time modernizing their data and analytics platforms. But what's really driving this change? The cloud or a desire for transformation? Deloitte explores.
Read more
AROUND THE WATER COOLER
European Cases
Today sees the commencement of two big court cases in Europe that deserve your attention. The first is Apple's challenge to the EU antitrust ruling that forced it to pay Ireland some $15 billion in back taxes. The second is the U.K. Supreme Court's consideration of the legality of Prime Minister Boris Johnson's suspension of Parliament (if it's illegal, and if he definitely did lie to the Queen about his reasons for the move, he might be finished.) Al Jazeera
Trump Taxes
The New York Country D.A. has subpoenaed eight years' worth of President Trump's tax returns, in the context of his investigation into alleged hush money payments (including the payoff Stormy Daniels says she received). The president has repeatedly refused to make his tax returns public. CNN
Musky Slur
When Elon Musk called cave diver Vern Unsworth "pedo guy," the billionaire merely meant he was a "creepy old man," Musk has argued in court documents relating to Unsworth's defamation lawsuit against him. Musk claims that, when growing up in his native South Africa, the former term implied the latter, rather than actual pedophilia. (Note from David: I too grew up in South Africa, though I'm seven years Musk's junior, and this is news to me.) Fortune
HTC CEO
The Taiwanese phone maker HTC has a new CEO: Yves Maitre, a former executive vice president at the French telecoms giant Orange. Maitre replaces Cher Wang, who will retain HTC's board chair. Engadget
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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