Apple to pay $95 million to settle claims it used Siri to eavesdrop on customers


Apple has agreed to pay $95 million to settle a civil lawsuit accusing the privacy-minded company of deploying its virtual assistant Siri to eavesdrop on people using its iPhone and other trendy devices.

The proposed settlement filed Tuesday in an Oakland, California, federal court would resolve a 5-year-old lawsuit revolving around allegations that Apple surreptitiously activated Siri to record conversations through iPhones and other devices equipped with the virtual assistant for more than a decade. The alleged recordings occurred even when people didn’t seek to activate the virtual assistant with the trigger words, “Hey, Siri.”

Read more…
Source: CBS News


Sign up for our Newsletter


Related:

  • ICAO ‘investigating’ security breach after hacker claims theft of personal data

    January 7, 2025

    UN aviation agency ‘investigating’ security breach after hacker claims theft of personal data The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), a United Nations agency that defines international operating standards for civil aviation, has confirmed it’s investigating a cybersecurity incident. In a statement published on Monday, ICAO said it is “actively investigating reports of a potential information security ...

  • New Orleans attacker filmed visits to city weeks earlier, wore Meta smart glasses during attack

    January 5, 2025

    The New Orleans terrorist attacker visited the Louisiana city twice in the weeks before the attack and recorded video of the area using Meta smart glasses, the FBI revealed Sunday. Shamsud-Din Jabbar, 42, stayed at a rental home in New Orleans at the end of October and again in November, just weeks prior to his attack ...

  • Apple to pay $95 million to settle claims it used Siri to eavesdrop on customers

    January 2, 2025

    Apple has agreed to pay $95 million to settle a civil lawsuit accusing the privacy-minded company of deploying its virtual assistant Siri to eavesdrop on people using its iPhone and other trendy devices. The proposed settlement filed Tuesday in an Oakland, California, federal court would resolve a 5-year-old lawsuit revolving around allegations that Apple surreptitiously activated ...

  • Data leak at VW subsidiary affects 800,000 electric cars

    December 27, 2024

    A data leak at the software company Cariad, a subsidiary of German car manufacturer Volkswagen (VW), left the personal details of electric car owners in Europe available online for months, Germany’s Spiegel news magazine reported on Friday. The movement data of 800,000 vehicles and contact information of the owners was accessible via the Amazon cloud storage ...

  • Data breach at IDHS compromises 1M customers

    December 26, 2024

    On April 25, the Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS) experienced a privacy breach. An outside entity, through a phishing campaign, gained access to multiple employee accounts, and files associated with the accounts. The files included the Social Security numbers (SSNs) of 4,701 customers and three employees. Separately, public assistance account information (name, public assistance account ...

  • WhatsApp scores historic victory against NSO Group in long-running spyware hacking case

    December 23, 2024

    A U.S. judge has ruled that Israeli spyware maker NSO Group breached hacking laws by using WhatsApp to infect devices with its Pegasus spyware. In a historic ruling on Friday, a Northern California federal judge held NSO Group liable for targeting the devices of 1,400 WhatsApp users, violating state and federal hacking laws as well as ...