Apple‘s decision to settle a $95 million lawsuit over Siri‘s unauthorized voice recordings marks a significant development in the growing tension between voice assistant technology and privacy rights. The settlement offers compensation to millions of Apple users whose private conversations may have been inadvertently captured by Siri between 2014 and 2024, highlighting how even accidental data collection can trigger substantial legal consequences for tech companies.
The big picture: Apple has agreed to pay $95 million to settle claims that Siri recorded private conversations without user consent, potentially affecting millions of customers who owned Siri-enabled devices over a ten-year period.
Who can claim compensation: Users who owned any Siri-enabled Apple device between September 17, 2014, and December 31, 2024, and experienced an accidental Siri activation during a private conversation are eligible for payment.
Compensation details: Eligible users can receive up to $20 per Siri-enabled device, with a maximum payout of $100 for five devices.
How to file a claim: Apple is notifying eligible customers via email or postcard with instructions on how to participate in the settlement.
Behind the numbers: This settlement represents one of the rare instances where consumers can receive direct compensation for privacy violations related to voice assistant technology.