As part of a bipartisan investigation of competition in digital markets, the U.S. House Judiciary Committee today sent a letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook requesting that the company provide any documents and executive communications related to its various policies for the App Store, product repairs, and more.



The investigation seeks any internal documents or communication involving Apple executives, such as emails, for the following topics:

Apple's decision to remove from the ‌App Store‌ or to impose any restrictions on certain parental control apps, including Freedom, Kidslox, Mobicip, OurPact, and Qustodio



Apple's ‌App Store‌ algorithm for determining rankings in search results



Apple's policy related to the ‌App Store‌'s in-app purchase mechanism and its revenue split



Apple's policy regarding whether apps are permitted to include in-app links to non-Apple payment systems



Apple's policy regarding whether users can set non-Apple apps as default, such as web browsers and music, maps, and email apps



Apple's policy regarding whether to allow any third-party app store beyond the ‌App Store‌ on the iPhone



Apple's decision to "sherlock" any functionality from third-party apps, including any discussions about Clue, Duet Display, and SwiftKey



Apple's policy regarding whether third-party web browsers must use a specific rendering engine, such as WebKit



Apple's restrictions on third-party repairs



Apple's decision to offer discounted iPhone battery replacements throughout 2018, or the actual or projected effects of this decision, including any effect on ‌iPhone‌ sales



Apple's decision to introduce the Independent Repair Provider Program



Apple's agreement to sell products on Amazon and corresponding move to limit unauthorized resellers on Amazon

The Committee has requested that Apple respond no later than October 14, 2019 and also sent similar letters to Facebook, Amazon, and Google.