Apple to Shell Out $95 Million to Settle Siri Spying Lawsuit [Updated]

Apple will pay $95 million to settle a proposed class action lawsuit involving Siri spying accusations, reports Reuters. The lawsuit alleges that Apple recorded conversations captured with accidental ‌Siri‌ activations, and then shared information from those conversations with third-party advertisers.

siri glow
Two plaintiffs claimed that after speaking about products like Air Jordan shoes and Olive Garden, their devices showed ads for those products, while another said he received ads for a surgical treatment after discussing it privately with his doctor.

The lawsuit dates back to 2019, after a report outed the private conversations that contractors were privy to when ‌Siri‌ was accidentally activated. Apple was using contractors to evaluate ‌Siri‌ recordings to make improvements to the service, and employees claimed to have heard confidential medical information, drug deals, intimate moments, and other private data.

Apple was never secretive about the fact that some ‌Siri‌ recordings were analyzed by humans, but the company's privacy terms at the time did not explicitly state that there was human oversight of ‌Siri‌. The customers that filed the lawsuit said that Apple did not inform consumers that they are "regularly being recorded without consent," and they claimed they would not have purchased Apple devices had they known about the ‌Siri‌ recordings.

While the lawsuit initially focused on Apple's lack of disclosure, the first filing was dismissed in February 2021 because it did not include enough concrete data about the recordings that Apple allegedly collected. An amended complaint that focused on ‌Siri‌ recordings used for "targeted advertising" was refiled in September 2021, and that was allowed to move forward.

There has been no evidence that Apple ever provided ‌Siri‌ recordings or information from ‌Siri‌ recordings to advertisers, and Apple's privacy policies have long made it clear that any data collected from ‌Siri‌ for the purpose of improving the feature is anonymized and not associated with a specific user.

In the settlement filing, Apple says that it "continues to deny any and all alleged wrongdoing and liability, specifically denies each of the Plaintiffs' contentions and claims, and continues to deny that the Plaintiffs' claims and allegations would be suitable for class action status." Apple is settling to avoid further costs of litigation.

The settlement has received preliminary approval from the court. According to the filing, all current or former owners or purchasers of a ‌Siri‌ device in the United States whose confidential or private communications were obtained by Apple between September 17, 2014 and December 31, 2024 are considered class members and could be eligible for a payment.

A settlement website will be set up to identify those eligible to participate within 45 days, with Apple required to share contact information for customers who purchased a device with ‌Siri‌ capabilities. Claim information will be collected until May 15, 2025, after which time the settlement will be finalized and payments will go out to eligible customers. Each class member will be able to submit claims for up to five ‌Siri‌ devices, receiving up to $20 for each one. The actual settlement payment will depend on the total number of valid claims that are submitted.

After the 2019 scandal about contractors listening to accidental ‌Siri‌ recordings, Apple temporarily suspended its ‌Siri‌ evaluation program, stopped using contractors, and implemented options that allow users to delete ‌Siri‌ recordings and block them from being listened to. In later updates, Apple moved some ‌Siri‌ processing on-device, reducing the content that's uploaded to its servers.

Update: In a statement provided to MacRumors, Apple made it clear that ‌Siri‌ data has never been used for marketing purposes or sold to any company for any reason.

Siri has been engineered to protect user privacy from the beginning. Siri data has never been used to build marketing profiles and it has never been sold to anyone for any purpose. Apple settled this case to avoid additional litigation so we can move forward from concerns about third-party grading that we already addressed in 2019. We use Siri data to improve Siri, and we are constantly developing technologies to make Siri even more private.

Apple aims to do as much ‌Siri‌ processing on-device as it can, and in these situations, no data is uploaded anywhere. Reading a message aloud, for example, is done on-device with no content sent to Apple's servers. Data that is processed on Apple's servers, such as a request that requires location information, is assigned a random identifier and is not tied directly do an Apple Account.

Transcripts of ‌Siri‌ conversations can be used to improve ‌Siri‌, Dictation, and Search, but any audio sharing is opt-in and has been since 2019, plus transcripts can be deleted at any time.

Popular Stories

Aston Martin CarPlay Ultra Screen

Apple's CarPlay Ultra to Expand to These Vehicle Brands Later This Year

Sunday February 1, 2026 10:08 am PST by
Last year, Apple launched CarPlay Ultra, the long-awaited next-generation version of its CarPlay software system for vehicles. Nearly nine months later, CarPlay Ultra is still limited to Aston Martin's latest luxury vehicles, but that should change fairly soon. In May 2025, Apple said many other vehicle brands planned to offer CarPlay Ultra, including Hyundai, Kia, and Genesis. In his Powe...
Apple Logo Black

Apple Just Made Its Second-Biggest Acquisition Ever After Beats

Thursday January 29, 2026 10:07 am PST by
Apple today confirmed to Reuters that it has acquired Q.ai, an Israeli startup that is working on artificial intelligence technology for audio. Apple paid close to $2 billion for Q.ai, according to sources cited by the Financial Times. That would make this Apple's second-biggest acquisition ever, after it paid $3 billion for the popular headphone and audio brand Beats in 2014. Q.ai has...
Apple Logo Black

Apple's Next Launch is 'Imminent'

Sunday February 1, 2026 12:31 pm PST by
The calendar has turned to February, and a new report indicates that Apple's next product launch is "imminent," in the form of new MacBook Pro models. "All signs point to an imminent launch of next-generation MacBook Pros that retain the current form factor but deliver faster chips," Bloomberg's Mark Gurman said on Sunday. "I'm told the new models — code-named J714 and J716 — are slated...
14 inch MacBook Pro Keyboard

Apple Changes How You Order a Mac

Saturday January 31, 2026 10:51 am PST by
Apple recently updated its online store with a new ordering process for Macs, including the MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, iMac, Mac mini, Mac Studio, and Mac Pro. There used to be a handful of standard configurations available for each Mac, but now you must configure a Mac entirely from scratch on a feature-by-feature basis. In other words, ordering a new Mac now works much like ordering an...
Apple MacBook Pro M4 hero

New MacBook Pros Reportedly Launching Alongside macOS 26.3

Sunday February 1, 2026 5:42 am PST by
Apple is planning to launch new MacBook Pro models with M5 Pro and M5 Max chips alongside macOS 26.3, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. "Apple's faster MacBook Pros are planned for the macOS 26.3 release cycle," wrote Gurman, in his Power On newsletter today. "I'm told the new models — code-named J714 and J716 — are slated for the macOS 26.3 software cycle, which runs from...

Top Rated Comments

TestedLion Avatar
14 months ago
"After the 2019 scandal about contractors listening to accidental ‌Siri‌ recordings"

accidental. Right. lol.

back in the day when I worked for Leapforce, as a subcontractor for Google, I must have listened to endless thousands of recordings (sometimes brief phrases, sometimes several seconds of dialogue). 100% of those recordings were clearly and obviously when the phone was just in the room. Zero of them were deliberate queries. Interesting how Google escaped a similar scandal when they were doing the same thing.

btw: There was one company (can't recall its name of the top of my head) that recruited "raters" for Apple. They did the same work we did, for the most part.
Score: 33 Votes (Like | Disagree)
iZac Avatar
14 months ago
I feel vindicated slightly for my pedantic action of disabling Siri on all my devices and disabling camera, microphone, photo, contacts and location access to almost every app.
Score: 31 Votes (Like | Disagree)
antiprotest Avatar
14 months ago
When will Apple improve their privacy to catch up with Google and Facebook?
Score: 23 Votes (Like | Disagree)
spazzcat Avatar
14 months ago

Siri? I thought it was meta listening to us. this still happens all the time. every time I discuss something it gets advertised to me on Facebook and instagram.
Apple is basically picking up the loose change under the couch to close this out and save lawyer fees.
Score: 22 Votes (Like | Disagree)
groove-agent Avatar
14 months ago

Apple was never secretive about the fact that some ‌Siri‌ recordings were analyzed by humans
.. and still Siri is dumb AF.

My wife and I get ads for things we were talking about all the time, even though we weren't searching for it on our computers. I don't think it's Apple, but Google tracking the tar out of us. They have their hands in so many things it doesn't surprise me.
Score: 20 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Suicidy Avatar
14 months ago
I just wish SIRI could handle simple requests, like playing a track from my favorites in Apple Music. Instead, it frequently tells me there is no such app.
Score: 18 Votes (Like | Disagree)