This Tuesday, Zuckerberg used Facebook user data to gain advantage for friends, Indonesia holds elections, Notre-Dame found structurally sound, millions of Americans lose healthcare every year, and the AU gives Sudan ultimatum.
Mark Zuckerberg leveraged Facebook user data to fight rivals and help friends, leaked documents show (NBC News)
Thwarting fraud: thousands to 'crowd-source' Indonesian election results (Reuters)
Notre-Dame found structurally sound after fire, as investigation begins (NY Times)
Millions already lose or change health plans every year (Axios)
Russian court jails Norwegian for 14 years for espionage (Reuters)
Pentagon developing military options to deter Russian, Chinese influence in Venezuela (CNN)
Taiwan president says Chinese drills a threat but not intimidated (Reuters)
India's Supreme Court considers call to open mosques to women (Reuters)
Egypt's parliament to vote on extending Sisi's rule (Al Jazeera)
DHS may classify fentanyl as a weapon of mass destruction (Axios)
Many people are too broke for bankruptcy. A new report suggests some fixes. (ProPublica)
Aung San Suu Kyi has a new target: political satire (NY Times)
In African villages, these phones become ultrasound scanners (NY Times)