Apple Sues OpenAI for Trade Secrets: What Happened After the Siri Partnership?
At WWDC 2024, Apple integrated ChatGPT into Siri — a rare deep partnership between two tech giants. Less than two years later, on July 10, 2026, Apple filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. Case No. 5:26-cv-07078.
"This case is about Apple's former employees stealing Apple's trade secrets for the benefit of OpenAI. Apple brings this suit to put a stop to it." — Apple complaint
The lawsuit exposes the brutal reality of the AI hardware race. For developers and engineering teams, three decision areas shift immediately:
Hardware Agent roadmaps: If an injunction blocks OpenAI's screenless speaker, edge-plus-cloud architectures get repriced.
IPO risk pricing: After a confidential S-1 filing, prediction markets cut 2026 IPO odds from ~22% to ~18.5%.
Talent mobility compliance: The complaint cites 400+ former Apple employees now at OpenAI.
Supply-chain trust: Alleged deception of a metal-finishing partner raises OEM compliance scrutiny.
Leadership transition: Tim Cook is expected to step down in September 2026; hardware chief John Ternus succeeds him.
Who Is Being Sued? Apple's Four-Pronged Trade Secret Allegations
| Defendant | Role |
|---|---|
| OpenAI Group PBC | Primary operating entity |
| OpenAI Foundation | Nonprofit arm |
| io Products | Hardware subsidiary, formerly co-founded by Jony Ive |
| Tang Yew Tan | OpenAI Chief Hardware Officer; former Apple VP of Product Design (iPhone & Apple Watch); 24 years at Apple |
| Chang Liu | OpenAI technical staff; former Senior Systems Electrical Engineer at Apple; 8 years at Apple |
Jony Ive — Apple's former Chief Design Officer and io co-founder — is not named and is not accused of wrongdoing.
Allegation 1: "Show and Tell" Interview Sessions
Apple alleges Tang Tan asked active Apple employees to bring physical components — batteries, logic boards, SiP chips, prototypes — to job interviews. Further allegations against Tan:
Codename probing: Used confidential internal project codenames to elicit unreleased product details.
Exit evasion coaching: Taught employees how to bypass Apple's exit security procedures.
Pre-departure exfiltration: Emailed himself supplier contacts and internal industry summaries before resigning.
Allegation 2: Post-Employment Network Intrusion (Chang Liu)
Liu left Apple on January 22, 2026 for OpenAI. Per the complaint:
Unreturned laptop: Failed to return a company-issued MacBook at departure.
Auth vulnerability: On February 9, weeks after leaving, still accessed internal network storage via an authentication bug.
Downloaded files: Did not report the bug; downloaded dozens of engineering specs and unreleased product data.
Coached Alyssa Peng: Directed fellow Apple employee Alyssa Peng (joined OpenAI April 2026) to copy files and use LINE to evade monitoring.
Allegation 3: Supply Chain + Scale
Apple claims OpenAI deceived a manufacturing partner into performing Apple's proprietary metal-finishing techniques by falsely implying Apple authorization. More than 400 former Apple employees now work at OpenAI; Apple says its investigation is ongoing and current allegations are only the tip of the iceberg.
| Allegation | Who | What |
|---|---|---|
| Show-and-tell interviews | Tang Tan | Physical components brought to interviews |
| Codename probing | Tang Tan | Confidential codenames to fish for unreleased details |
| Exit evasion | Tang Tan | Coached bypass of exit security |
| Pre-departure emails | Tang Tan | Supplier contacts emailed to personal account |
| Laptop + network exploit | Chang Liu | Kept laptop; exploited auth bug post-departure |
| LINE coaching | Chang Liu | Directed Peng to copy files off monitored systems |
| Supply chain deception | OpenAI / io | Misled partner on metal-finishing authorization |
OpenAI's Response and the Partnership-to-Rivalry Timeline
July 10 (day of filing) — Drew Pusateri on X:
"We have no interest in other companies' trade secrets. We remain focused on building innovative technology that empowers people everywhere."
July 14 (formal statement):
"While we take these allegations seriously, we're not aware of any evidence that this complaint has merit. We believe in fair competition and allowing people the freedom to work wherever they choose."
Legal observers note the statements decline to address specific claims — the unreturned laptop, authentication exploit, downloaded files, and supplier deception. Apple's narrative remains the most detailed public account.
| Date | Development |
|---|---|
| 2024 (WWDC) | ChatGPT integrated into Siri |
| 2023–2024 | Jony Ive begins secret hardware collaboration with OpenAI |
| May 2025 | OpenAI acquires io Products for ~$6.4–6.5B |
| Early 2026 | Tang Tan, Chang Liu, and hundreds of ex-Apple hardware engineers join OpenAI |
| February 2026 | Apple contacts OpenAI about trade secrets — no response |
| July 10, 2026 | Apple files suit |
| July 15, 2026 | Bloomberg: first device is a portable, screenless AI smart speaker |
Why now? Apple raised concerns in February but filed only as hardware neared reveal and after the IPO process started — maximizing leverage to halt hardware, complicate the IPO story, and deter talent exodus.
OpenAI's First Device, IPO Pressure, and Apple's Legal Demands
Bloomberg's July 15 report: OpenAI's first consumer product is a portable, screen-free smart speaker positioned as a home AI computer:
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Interaction | Voice-only via GPT-Live full-duplex model |
| Sensing | Built-in camera and environmental sensors |
| Mechanics | Moving elements for a sense of life and personality |
| Mobility | Battery-powered, moves between rooms |
| Personalization | Learns habits over time, becomes more proactive |
| Launch | Reveal 2026, commercial launch 2027 |
Apple's complaint explicitly ties the device's development to misappropriated Apple secrets. It will compete with Echo and Nest; OpenAI claims it is fundamentally different from HomePod.
| IPO pressure | Detail |
|---|---|
| S-1 filing | June 8, 2026 confidential filing; Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley lead |
| Valuation | Altman insists on $1 trillion — refuses to list below |
| IPO odds | Prediction markets: ~22% before suit → ~18.5% after |
| Injunction risk | Preliminary injunction could halt hardware before shelves |
| Financials | $38.5B net loss on $13B revenue in 2025; profit not expected before 2029 |
| SoftBank | $40B bridge loan due March 2027 |
Apple seeks: injunction against use/disclosure of secrets; return of materials; evidence preservation; compensatory and punitive damages. Case friction: California bars non-compete contracts; Apple must prove illegal taking and use of secrets; OpenAI may argue supplier independence or public-domain information on metal finishing.
What to Watch Next, Developer Playbook, and Citable Facts
Track preliminary injunction: A ruling could collapse hardware launch plans within weeks or months.
Read OpenAI's Answer: Watch whether they deny specific facts or rely on legal defenses only.
Model Discovery risk: Emails, Slack, engineering files, and interview notes may become public.
Revisit hardware Agent plans: Voice-first home devices need a backup if injunction lands.
Update risk registers: Heavy OpenAI API or investment exposure should log material litigation.
Keep Apple build infra stable: iOS/macOS CI, TestFlight, and Metal toolchains still need dedicated Mac capacity.
5:26-cv-07078: Northern District of California, filed July 10, 2026.
400+ / 18.5%: Former Apple staff at OpenAI; post-suit 2026 IPO odds ~18.5%.
$6.4–6.5B / $40B: io Products acquisition; SoftBank bridge loan due March 2027.
Honest alternatives: a personal Mac alone sleeps and breaks CI; macOS VMs violate the EULA and cripple Metal; Windows/Linux-only CI cannot cover Xcode signing and notarization. For production iOS CI/CD and always-on AI Agent automation on Apple Silicon, renting a dedicated Mac Mini M4 from KVMNODE is usually the steadier path. See the pricing page, help center, or order flow. For OpenAI IPO context see our OpenAI funding guide.
Data as of July 15, 2026