TOP NEWS
Facebook Breach
Facebook is in yet more privacy-related hot water after an exposed server was found online containing over 419 million records of users' phone numbers. That includes 133 million Americans' numbers and 18 million British people's numbers, so expect Facebook to face trouble, again, under EU data protection laws. TechCrunch
YouTube Settlement
YouTube will pay $170 million to settle allegations of violating children's privacy by collecting their personal data without parental consent. The Federal Trade Commission's two Democrats voted against the deal, saying it let YouTube off too easily. Alphabet's shares jumped 1.1% on the news. Fortune
China Talks
High-level trade talks between the U.S. and China will recommence next month, Chinese state-run TV has said. Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin apparently had a phone chat this morning, and further groundwork will be laid later this month. Wall Street Journal
WeWork Payment
Analysts and would-be investors were concerned about a $5.9 million all-stock payment WeWork made to the investment vehicle of CEO Adam Neumann for the privilege of using the trademarked word "we"—so he's returned it. The company will also add a woman (Harvard's Frances Frei) to its otherwise all-male board of directors. Financial Times
Minding the Gaps
Some people may think that innovation and operational excellence don't mesh, but the CEO of Toyota Connected, Zack Hicks, isn't one of them. Deloitte shares his story and how he makes 'ambidextrous' leadership work.
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AROUND THE WATER COOLER
Nissan Overpayment
Nissan CEO Hiroto Saikawa has confirmed that the company overcompensated him and has promised to return the money. However, he denies wrongdoing, claiming that the compensation scheme's operation—a bonus payout was delayed for a week to benefit from a share price boost—was to his knowledge at the time "handled properly." BBC
Investment Banks
The first half of 2019 was dire for investment banks, which saw revenues plummet to 13-year lows. The starkest drop-off was in equities. The causes for the decline include the trade war, slowing growth, new European investor-protection rules and low interest rates. Financial Times
Brexit Bind
Boris Johnson yesterday became the first British prime minister ever to lose his first three parliamentary votes. Not only is Parliament's no-deal-Brexit-blocking legislation on course to be set in stone by Monday next week (just before Johnson's five-week suspension of Parliament) but lawmakers refused to back the PM's call for a snap election—they first want to make sure he can't use the election to push through a no-deal Brexit at the end of October. AP
Walmart Ammo
Walmart's decision to stop selling certain types of gun ammunition has had predictable results in the media. Fox's Tucker Carlson lambasted the company for "sounding woke" while pushing "the appalling lie that brightly colored plastic crap from China is going to make us happy." MSNBC notes that some Walmart employees had petitioned management to stop gun sales. MSNBC
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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