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Sam Altman didnt need another lawsuit

admin by admin
July 15, 2026
Sam Altman didn’t need another lawsuit
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OpenAI has spent the better part of the year involved in lawsuit after lawsuit, including one from the world’s richest man. But last Friday, the company was hit with one of the highest-profile legal actions yet — from Apple. OpenAI’s expensive hardware bet is what’s on the line.

Apple’s lawsuit against OpenAI, filed in Northern California federal court, accused former Apple employees of “stealing Apple’s trade secrets for the benefit of OpenAI.” The 41-page complaint states that Apple keeps its “product development, manufacturing, supply chain, technology research, and other innovations confidential” and that “the trade secrets spanning Apple’s hardware operations collectively constitute one of the most valuable intellectual assets in all of American business.”

The allegations referenced three former Apple employees: Tang Tan, former VP of Apple Watch, who spent 24 years at Apple before becoming chief hardware officer of OpenAI (after OpenAI bought Jony Ive’s hardware company, io); Chang Liu, former systems electrical engineer for iPhone, who spent eight years at Apple before departing for OpenAI; and Yu-Ting “Alyssa” Peng, another former Apple employee who also left for OpenAI. (Less is known about Peng’s Apple tenure.) The lawsuit makes a lot of wild claims, including Tan allegedly requesting prospective employees to bring Apple hardware outside the office for “show and tell” during their OpenAI interviews and coaching Apple employees about how to avoid the company’s offboarding security procedures. (It’s unclear which, if any, of Apple’s hardware-related trade secrets may have made it into OpenAI’s device, as it does not yet have a publicly shown product.)

Avery Williams, cochair of the trade secret practice area at McKool Smith and author of the firm’s AI Litigation Tracker, told The Verge that he thinks OpenAI’s legal troubles are far from over. “They’ve gotten sued a lot. [But] OpenAI is not going to be out of the woods until we get a ruling from a higher court on the fair use question for AI training. It’s a trillion-dollar question.”

The lawsuit is yet another obstacle for OpenAI, which has had a rollercoaster six months full of drama with rivals over US military red lines, protests over contract with the US government, a drawn-out legal battle with former OpenAI co-founder Elon Musk, and a race with Anthropic over which frontier lab would be first to IPO — not to mention a laundry list of lawsuits, a few of which came from Musk himself. Another still ongoing lawsuit was brought by the family of Adam Raine, a 16-year-old who died by suicide after confiding in ChatGPT. And then there’s the long-running suit brought by The New York Times and other publishers against OpenAI, alleging copyright infringement.

The timing of Apple’s lawsuit is also far from ideal for OpenAI: The company is gearing up to go public, having confidentially submitted a Form S-1 last month with the SEC; it’s facing investor pressure to turn a profit; and it’s cut out a bunch of “side quests” in order to focus on key revenue drivers like enterprise and coding. Perhaps most significantly, though, it’s getting ready to release a much-hyped hardware device in 2027, after paying nearly $6.5 billion to buy famed Apple designer Jony Ive’s hardware startup, io (and handling yet another lawsuit from a company called Iyo). Apple may have a reputation for falling behind in AI, but it’s always had a head start in hardware, and OpenAI has the opposite reputation. A common industry refrain states that “hardware is hard”; for evidence, just take a look at the graveyard of erstwhile overhyped AI devices, like the Humane AI pin.

“The next frontier is going to be AI hardware, more than just chips … Robotics and other types of physical AI is the next area that is ripe for disruption,” said Charlyn Ho, CEO and founder of Rikka Law Group, a law firm focusing on tech, privacy, and cybersecurity law. “It’s kind of interesting to see OpenAI … going into that play, because maybe they’re seeing [that] just the pure software play is not profitable.” She added, “They’re a frontier lab. They’re spending more money than they’re making at the moment.”

It makes sense that OpenAI would want to hire to fill in those hardware gaps and speed up its hardware progress. But now, it’s led to what will likely be a costly legal battle.

“It’s never fantastic to get sued by Apple when you’re trying to IPO,” said McKool Smith’s Williams. “Apple is a tenacious litigant … They do not tend to back down.”

OpenAI did not respond to a request for comment.

Over the weekend, one X user wrote, “Sam Altman wasn’t afraid of Elon but he is terrified of Apple. You can tell by all his posting today.” Altman replied, “i am not afraid of apple, but i have tremendous respect for them. s-tier company.”

Apple and OpenAI have in the past had a relatively positive public relationship; the two in 2024 entered into an agreement to integrate ChatGPT into Apple devices. This lawsuit represents a significant departure. “Apple and OpenAI have been on the same side … As the industry gets more and more competitive, you’re starting to see these alliances fracture,” said Rikka Law Group’s Ho.

In today’s hyper-competitive AI industry, public accusations or lawsuits over trade secrets, corporate espionage, and illicit information harvesting are incredibly common. Point to any AI leader and chances are they’ve got at least one lawsuit or accusation to their name. As far as trade secrets, there’s Scale AI accusing an employee who left for Mercor, xAI accusing employees who left for OpenAI, and Tesla accusing an employee who allegedly transferred data about an AI supercomputer to his personal laptop (and another employee related to robotics-related trade secrets). As far as distillation and improper information harvesting, there’s Anthropic’s accusations to Chinese AI companies and xAI’s alleged distillation of OpenAI’s models.

And although Apple’s lawsuit against OpenAI made headlines, most experts The Verge spoke with said none of the allegations were particularly unusual in and of themselves — it was more interesting that they all happened in the same case and that they were two large players. Trade secrets lawsuits can also be tough to prove in court, since unlike copyright or trademark lawsuits, you’re not typically directly comparing one thing against another. Haibing Lu, professor of information systems and analytics at Santa Clara University’s Leavey School of Business, said Apple’s allegations are “not unique” and that “it’s quite common in Silicon Valley.” McKool Smith’s Williams said that the case reads like a “run-of-the-mill trade secrets misappropriations claim.”

“This isn’t really an AI case as it is a case against an AI company,” Williams continued. “The players are huge, but the allegations are otherwise not unusual.”

For Michael Barnhart, a nation-state threat researcher at cybersecurity firm DTEX, “the layered approach” of the allegations made Apple’s lawsuit interesting: hiring-stage extraction, interview-based solicitation, internal collusion. It’s “very run-of-the-mill in terms of insider threats and this is how they act,” he said. But at the same time, he said, “We can sit there and I’ll pull up a company that did one of these things badly … You’ll have one, you’ll have two, you’ll have three — this one’s got all of them. This one has so many. And also, too, at the highest level.”

It’s somewhat ironic that, in an industry that’s only possible because of the untold amounts of data it’s consumed — whether technically above-board or unauthorized — AI labs get particularly litigious when others take that information elsewhere. After all, the AI industry is a small world, and it’s famously cliquish. Anthropic was founded by ex-OpenAI executives, xAI was founded by an ex-OpenAI cofounder, and countless startups have been acquired (or their core talent acqui-hired) by either the workplaces they were born out of or those companies’ chief competitors. Many of the most influential people at every leading AI company once worked extremely closely with their rivals at another, and in the future, many of them probably will again.

But mentioning that type of irony about the AI industry means you have to bear out that same point across recent decades. Yes, Anthropic allegedly scanned millions of copyrighted books to train its AI models, but the pre-generative AI tech industry spent decades entrenched in similar controversies: Google scanning millions of books to create a searchable database, for instance, or the sheer amount of piracy YouTube indirectly enabled in the early 2000s.

Apple implied in its legal filing that there were significantly more former employees who left for OpenAI with key information than it named in the lawsuit. The company said it had “uncovered a pattern of theft of Apple’s trade secrets by OpenAI employees who were formerly at Apple” and that “this is the tip of the iceberg … At every level, from members of its Technical Staff to its Chief Hardware Officer, and in coordination with business partners, OpenAI has been stealing Apple’s trade secrets and confidential information.”

Alex Terepka, a founding partner of Watstein Terepka LLP, said the case is likely to be contentious and drawn out, potentially over the course of years. “Apple and OpenAI are going to be in this for the long haul,” he said. “What Apple’s put together here is frankly way more than enough to survive a motion to dismiss. Then you’re going to get into discovery, which in these types of cases can be super involved.”

The software side of the AI industry has generated inestimable hype, competition, and controversy, but hardware is the next area AI companies have their sights set on conquering. But since AI devices haven’t truly been tested yet on a broad scale, it’ll take time to see what success in that space looks like — especially with a potential yearslong legal battle between Apple and OpenAI ahead.

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