February 12, 2026
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FTC Chair Warns Apple News Over Alleged Political Bias and Possible FTC Act Violations

FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson has sent a formal letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook warning that alleged political or ideological bias in the Apple News app’s curation algorithm could violate Section 5 of the FTC Act if it contradicts Apple’s terms of service or consumers’ reasonable expectations. Ferguson writes that while the First Amendment protects Big Tech speech, it does not shield 'material misrepresentations' or unfair practices, and says companies that suppress or promote news based on viewpoint without clear disclosure may be engaging in deceptive omissions or causing non‑offset consumer injury. He urges Apple to conduct a comprehensive review of Apple News’ terms of service and curation practices and to take 'corrective action swiftly' if favoritism is not adequately disclosed. The letter follows a Media Research Center study claiming that of 620 stories Apple News surfaced in January, 440 came from left‑leaning outlets, 180 from centrist outlets, and none from right‑leaning outlets — statistics Ferguson cites as potential evidence of undisclosed ideological skew. Apple did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment, and the letter stops short of announcing a formal investigation but clearly puts one of the most powerful U.S. gatekeepers of news on notice that viewpoint‑based ranking could be treated as a consumer‑protection issue, not just a culture‑war gripe.

FTC and Big Tech Regulation Apple and Digital News Platforms

📌 Key Facts

  • FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson sent a letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook warning that Apple News’ curation practices could violate Section 5 of the FTC Act if ideological bias is undisclosed or inconsistent with its terms of service.
  • Ferguson states that Big Tech news suppression or promotion based on perceived political viewpoint may be unlawful when it conflicts with stated policies, withholds material information from consumers, or causes substantial, unavoidable injury.
  • The letter cites a Media Research Center study claiming that in a sample of 620 Apple News stories from Jan. 1–31, 440 came from left‑leaning outlets, 180 from centrist outlets, and zero from right‑leaning outlets.
  • Ferguson tells Cook to 'conduct a comprehensive review' of Apple’s terms and curation and to move 'swiftly' to correct any practices that mislead users about ideological neutrality; Apple declined to comment to Fox.
  • The FTC chair emphasizes that the agency is not 'the speech police' but is mandated to police misrepresentations and omissions even when the product is a 'speech-related' service like a news aggregator.

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