logo
Apple Sues Former Engineer for Allegedly Stealing Vision Pro Secrets Before Joining Snap

Apple Sues Former Engineer for Allegedly Stealing Vision Pro Secrets Before Joining Snap

Hans India2 days ago
Apple has filed a lawsuit against a former senior engineer, Di Liu, alleging he stole sensitive company information related to its upcoming Vision Pro headset just before moving to Snap Inc.
According to legal documents submitted in California on June 24, 2025, Liu, who worked at Apple from 2017 until his resignation in 2024, is accused of downloading thousands of confidential files in his final days with the company. Apple claims the data transfer occurred while Liu still had access to his company-issued laptop and credentials.
Liu served as a system product design engineer on the Vision Pro, a highly anticipated mixed-reality headset positioned as Apple's most ambitious entry into the spatial computing space. The tech giant alleges that the documents Liu took included proprietary hardware designs, technology architecture, internal project codenames, and even sensitive supply chain details.
What raises further concern for Apple is Liu's undisclosed move to Snap—a direct competitor in the augmented reality market, known for its Spectacles smart eyewear. Because Liu did not reveal his new employer during his resignation process, he was granted a standard two-week transition period, during which Apple alleges he misused his active credentials to access and extract classified materials.
In the legal filing, Apple's attorneys stated, 'Worse still, the review of Liu's Apple-issued work laptop also shows that while maintaining access to Apple's Proprietary Information under false pretences, he used his Apple credentials to exfiltrate thousands of documents... from Apple's secure file storage systems.'
While the lawsuit is directed solely at Liu, Apple's legal team highlights the suspicious overlap between the content of the documents allegedly taken and Snap's work in AR technologies. Though Snap is not named as a defendant, the implication is clear: Apple sees Liu's new position as a potential risk to its competitive edge.
This legal action is part of Apple's broader push to protect its intellectual property. In previous cases, Apple pursued former employees suspected of leaking sensitive information, including a 2022 settlement with ex-employee Simon Lancaster and a 2024 lawsuit against Andrew Aude, which was later dropped after he apologized.
As the case develops, all eyes are on how the court will interpret Liu's actions and whether Apple's claims of corporate espionage will hold up under scrutiny.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US' 1% remittance tax to have limited impact on India, but adds to cost of transfers
US' 1% remittance tax to have limited impact on India, but adds to cost of transfers

Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • Indian Express

US' 1% remittance tax to have limited impact on India, but adds to cost of transfers

Sending money back home for Indians and other expatriates working in the US will possibly get a little more expensive after American lawmakers in the Senate on Tuesday and the House of Representatives on Thursday narrowly passed President Donald Trump's 'big, beautiful' spending bill containing a proposal to impose a new 1 per cent tax on remittances. The 1 per cent tax on remittances in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) will come into effect from January 1, 2026. Originally proposed as a 5 per cent tax on non-commercial money transfers sent overseas, the rate was cut to 3.5 per cent and finally to 1 per cent. Crucially, the version passed by the Senate made some important exclusions which can soothe the pain. For one, the tax only applies to remittances sent using cash, money orders, cashier's checks, or where the sender provides 'any other similar physical instrument' to service providers. This means, the tax – which will only apply to transfers of more than $15 – will not be levied on transfers made through bank accounts or US-issued debit and credit cards. The tax will also not apply if the sender can prove US citizenship. According to Gaura Sen Gupta, Chief Economist at IDFC FIRST Bank, the impact of the tax on money sent to India is likely to be distributional in in 2025-26, with remittances 'frontloaded and more concentrated' in the first three quarters of the fiscal given that the tax will only come into effect in January 2026. 'But the fact that it's a much lower rate than what was proposed earlier means the impact should be limited,' Sen Gupta added. Meanwhile, US-based non-profit Center for Global Development estimates India stands to lose slightly less than $500 million in formal remittances due to the US imposing the tax, only second to Mexico, which faces a hit of more than $1.5 billion. A tax on remittances can be a big headache for India given that it is the top recipient country. According to the latest data released by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) last week, personal transfers from abroad in 2024-25 were up 16 per cent from the previous year at $124.31 billion on a net basis. In gross terms, they were up 14 per cent at $132.07 billion. Of course, not all of India's remittances come from the US. However, the world's largest economy is the biggest source, accounting for 27.7 per cent of remittances India received in 2023-24, as per the RBI's latest remittances survey. Given that the gross personal transfers in 2023-24 stood at $115.55 billion, India got roughly $32 billion from the US that year. What is worth noting here is not so much the amount of remittances from the US but the fact that a larger and larger share of the money India gets from abroad is coming from the US. Back in 2016-17, the US' share of remittances into India was 22.9 per cent. The importance of remittances India receives cannot be overstated: in 2024-25, not only did net remittances fully cover the country's goods and services trade deficit of $98.39 billion, but there was another $26 billion or so left after doing so. Even if remittances into India from the US don't decline by much, the tax represents a new hurdle for cross-border payments. But just how costly is it to send money into India? According to the World Bank, the average cost of sending $200 to India in October-December 2024 was 5.3 per cent compared to the global average of 6.6 per cent. The cost of making international payments rises depending on the number of intermediaries, or correspondent banks, involved, with fees being charged and operational delays possible at every stage. These costs and delays have been a key driver of central banks exploring the use of their digital currencies to make cross-border transfers. Another route to cut down on time and cost inefficiencies in current cross-border payments has been the linking of national instant payment systems, something which India has already started doing by connecting its Unified Payments Interface with Singapore's PayNow. Project Nexus of the Bank for International Settlements, a global organisation of central banks, takes matters to another level by focusing on 'cheaper, faster, more transparent and accessible' cross-border payments. The RBI joined Project Nexus last year. Siddharth Upasani is a Deputy Associate Editor with The Indian Express. He reports primarily on data and the economy, looking for trends and changes in the former which paint a picture of the latter. Before The Indian Express, he worked at Moneycontrol and financial newswire Informist (previously called Cogencis). Outside of work, sports, fantasy football, and graphic novels keep him busy. ... Read More

Nvidia briefly on track to become world's most valuable company ever
Nvidia briefly on track to become world's most valuable company ever

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Nvidia briefly on track to become world's most valuable company ever

By Noel Randewich and Shashwat Chauhan Nvidia hit a market value of $3.92 trillion on Thursday, briefly putting it on track to become the most valuable company in history, as Wall Street doubled down on optimism about AI. Shares of the leading designer of high-end AI chips rose as much as 2.4% to $160.98 in morning trading, giving the company a higher market capitalization than Apple 's record closing value of $3.915 trillion on December 26, 2024. The shares were last up 1.5% at $159.60, leaving Nvidia's stock market value at $3.89 trillion, just short of Apple's record. Nvidia's newest chips have made gains in training the largest artificial-intelligence models, fueling demand for products by the Santa Clara, California, company. Microsoft is currently the second-most valuable company on Wall Street, with a market capitalization of $3.7 trillion as its shares rose 1.7% to $499.56. Apple rose 0.8%, giving it a market value of $3.19 trillion, in third place. A race among Microsoft, Meta Platforms , Alphabet and Tesla to build AI data centers and dominate the emerging technology has fueled insatiable demand for Nvidia's high-end processors. "When the first company crossed a trillion dollars, it was amazing. And now you're talking four trillion, which is just incredible. It tells you that there's this huge rush with AI spending and everybody's chasing it right now," said Joe Saluzzi, co-manager of trading at Themis Trading. The stock market value of Nvidia, whose core technology was developed to power video games, has increased nearly eight-fold over the past four years, from $500 billion in 2021 to now near $4 trillion. Nvidia is now worth more than the combined value of the Canadian and Mexican stock markets, according to LSEG data. The tech company also exceeds the total value of all publicly listed companies in the United Kingdom. Nvidia recently traded at about 32 times analysts' expected earnings for the next 12 months, below its average of about 41 over the past five years, according to LSEG data. That relatively modest price-to-earnings valuation reflects steadily increasing earnings estimates that have outpaced Nvidia's sizable stock gains. The company's stock has now rebounded more than 68% from its recent closing low on April 4, when Wall Street was reeling from President Donald Trump's global tariff announcements. U.S. stocks, including Nvidia, have recovered on expectations that the White House will cement trade deals to soften Trump's tariffs. Nvidia's swelling market capitalization underscores Wall Street's big bets on the proliferation of generative AI technology, with the chipmaker's hardware serving as the foundation. The sharp increases in the shares of Nvidia and other Wall Street heavyweights have left people who save for their retirements through widely used S&P 500 index funds heavily exposed to the future of AI technology. Nvidia now accounts for 7% of the S&P 500. Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, Amazon and Alphabet together make up 28% of the index. "I strongly believe that AI is a greatly productive tool, but I am fairly sure that the current delivery of AI via large language models and large reasoning models are unlikely to live up to the hype," cautioned Kim Forrest, chief investment officer at Bokeh Capital Partners. Co-founded in 1993 by CEO Jensen Huang, Nvidia has evolved from a niche company popular among video game enthusiasts into Wall Street's barometer for the AI industry. The stock's recent rally comes after a slow first half of the year, when investor optimism about AI took a back seat to worries about tariffs and Trump's trade dispute with Beijing. Chinese startup DeepSeek in January triggered a selloff in global equities markets with a cut-price AI model that outperformed many Western competitors and sparked speculation that companies might spend less on high-end processors. In November of last year, Nvidia took over the spot on the Dow Jones Industrial Average formerly occupied by chipmaker Intel, reflecting a major shift in the semiconductor industry toward AI-linked development and the graphics processing hardware pioneered by Nvidia.

Tired of spam texts? iOS 26's new filter might be the fix you need
Tired of spam texts? iOS 26's new filter might be the fix you need

Mint

time2 hours ago

  • Mint

Tired of spam texts? iOS 26's new filter might be the fix you need

Apple's new iOS 26 made its debut at the Worldwide Developer Conference this year where its new Liquid Glass design stole all the limelight. However, there is a lot that the new OS for iPhone has to offer beyond just the aesthetics. A report by 9to5Mac has found a new feature in the iOS 26 beta version that could solve a major source of frustration for most users: spam messages. With iOS 26, Apple is providing an option to silence texts from unknown numbers and filter them into a separate area inside the Messages app. Notably, the Messages app on iOS 26 will ask users if they want the new screening feature to filter out texts detected as possible spam messages. After enabling the feature, users will not get notifications about these possible spam texts and they will be hidden inside a separate section within the app. Users will still be able to access these texts if they want to by navigating to the filtering tool on the top right corner of the Messages app and switching between different types of texts. The Messages app now offers four different sections: Messages, Unknown Senders, Spam and Recently Deleted. Although users will not get notifications for possible spam texts, they will still get a visual prompt on the filters button when there is a screened text that they may want to check. This approach allows users to decide for themselves if they want to spend time reading a text from an unknown sender or just skip it. While the spam filtering on iOS 26 is a nifty addition to Messages, not all features within the new OS are that great. For instance, fresh reports started coming in this week that Apple will freeze video calls within the FaceTime app if it detects nudity. While this feature was announced as part of the child safety initiative with iOS 26 and other Apple OS versions, it is now affecting all users and there is no way to know for sure if this is a deliberate act by the company or just a bug in the beta version of the UI.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store