In the digital era, where news feeds aim to reflect the myriad voices of society, a new dispute has emerged over what appears — or doesn’t — on one of the world’s most widely used news platforms. On Thursday, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) sent a strongly worded letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook, raising concerns that Apple News may be favoring certain political viewpoints while sidelining others.
At issue is a report from the Media Research Center, a conservative media watchdog, that examined Apple News’s curated headlines in January and found that top stories overwhelmingly came from outlets perceived as left-leaning — such as The Washington Post, The Associated Press and NBC News — with no major conservative-leaning publications featured in the most prominent slots. Conservative outlets like Fox News, Breitbart and Daily Wire were reportedly absent from the app’s highly visible feeds.
In its letter, FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson — a Trump-appointed regulator — acknowledged that the agency does not have authority to control what content Apple chooses to promote or suppress. “The FTC is not the speech police,” he wrote, adding that the commission’s role is to protect consumers from misleading practices. Ferguson said that if Apple’s news curation is inconsistent with the company’s terms of service or with “reasonable expectations of consumers,” it could violate Section 5 of the FTC Act, which bars unfair or deceptive acts or practices.
The letter urges Apple to conduct a comprehensive review of how Apple News selects and highlights stories, and to take “corrective action” if its practices do not align with the app’s terms and disclosures. The FTC’s concern is rooted in consumer protection law rather than direct regulation of editorial choices, but critics of Apple say the warning reflects growing political scrutiny of tech platforms’ influence over information access.
Apple News aggregates articles from thousands of publications and uses algorithmic and editorial signals to personalize feeds for users. Apple has not immediately responded to the FTC warning, but the issue adds to broader debates about perceived bias on digital platforms, the proprietary role of algorithms, and how much oversight — if any — government regulators should exercise over news distribution tools.
AI Image Disclaimer Visuals are created with AI tools and are not real photographs.
Sources Reuters Associated Press CBS News Washington Post Deadline (industry reporting)

