Apple settles lawsuit over late Siri AI features for $250 million


A view of Apple iPhones displayed at an Apple Store at Grand Central Terminal in New York City, New York, U.S., October 16, 2024. REUTERS/Kent J. Edwards

SAN FRANCISCO, ⁠May 5 (Reuters) - Apple on Tuesday settled for $250 ⁠million a shareholder lawsuit brought after the company delayed ‌artificial-intelligence upgrades to its Siri voice assistant.

The lawsuit, filed by Peter Landsheft in U.S. federal court in California in 2024, arose after ​the iPhone maker announced - and started ⁠running advertisements for - a ⁠bevy of AI upgrades at its annual software developer conference ⁠in ‌2024, saying they would become available with new iPhones that fall.

The iPhones launched without those ⁠features, which the plaintiffs claimed harmed shareholders. ​In 2025, Apple ‌said that the AI overhaul of Siri would ⁠not come ​until this year, and executives have now confirmed that the new Siri features will be unveiled at Apple's annual developer ⁠conference next month.

Apple did not admit ​to any fault in the settlement, which still needs approval from a judge. In a statement, Apple said it ⁠released numerous other AI features since the launch of what it calls Apple Intelligence in 2024.

"Apple has reached a settlement to resolve claims related to the availability of ​two additional features. We resolved ⁠this matter to stay focused on doing what we do ​best, delivering the most innovative products ‌and services to our users," ​the company said in a statement.

(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

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