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Apple’s ₹790-Crore Siri Settlement: Who Qualifies, How to Claim, and What Happens Next

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Apple’s ₹790-Crore Siri Settlement: Quick Facts

ItemDetails
Why the payout?Class-action lawsuit alleged Siri sometimes recorded private conversations after mis-hearing “Hey Siri.” Apple denies wrongdoing but will pay US $95 million (~ ₹790 crore) to settle.
Who qualifies?U.S. users who owned or used up to five Siri-enabled Apple devices between Oct 2013 – Nov 2023 and experienced unintended Siri activations.
Payout per personUp to US $20 (~ ₹1,700) per device, maximum US $100 (~ ₹8,500). Final amount depends on the number of valid claims.
How to claimFile online at LopezVoiceAssistantSettlement.com. Provide contact info, Apple ID or serial numbers, and a brief statement that Siri mis-activated.
Deadline2 July 2025 (11:59 p.m. PDT) to submit a claim, opt out, or object.
Next court date1 August 2025 final approval hearing, Northern District of California.
Payment timingFunds distributed late 2025 or early 2026 if the settlement receives final approval and there are no appeals.

Apple has agreed to pay US $95 million (about ₹790 crore) to settle a class-action lawsuit alleging that its voice assistant, Siri, sometimes recorded users’ private conversations without consent. The deal, reached in the California federal court case Lopez v. Apple Inc., covers accidental Siri activations between October 2013 and November 2023. Eligible U.S. customers can receive up to US $100 (roughly ₹8,500) per person—US $20 (≈ ₹1,700) for each of as many as five qualifying devices. Apple denies wrongdoing but says settling avoids a protracted trial.

Who can file a claim

To qualify, you must have owned or regularly used any Siri-enabled iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Mac, HomePod, AirPods, Apple TV, or iPod touch in the United States during the ten-year class period and experienced at least one unintended Siri activation. Proof of the specific recording is not required; a brief declaration that Siri turned on uninvited is enough. Each household member may file separately, and parents may file for minors.

How much money is on the table

Payouts are capped at US $20 per device and US $100 per claimant. If total claims exceed the US $95 million fund after fees and costs, individual payments will be reduced pro rata. If fewer people file, individual payments may be lower than the cap but should remain significant; the settlement administrator will publish a final payout estimate once the claim window closes.

Filing in five minutes

  1. Go to LopezVoiceAssistantSettlement.com and choose “File a Claim.”
  2. If you received an e-mail or postcard notice titled “Lopez Voice Assistant Class Action Settlement,” enter the Claim ID and Confirmation Code printed on it. If you did not receive a notice, select “New Claim.”
  3. Provide your name, postal address, e-mail, and either (a) the Apple ID that held your devices or (b) serial numbers for each device (find them under Apple ID → Devices or on original receipts).
  4. Write a one-sentence description of an accidental Siri activation—for example, “In 2019 Siri turned on while I was discussing a private medical issue in my living room.”
  5. Choose a payment method: direct deposit (ACH), PayPal, Venmo, or paper check. Submit before 11:59 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time on 2 July 2025 and save the confirmation for your records.

Key dates

  • 2 July 2025 – deadline to submit a claim, opt out, or object to the settlement.
  • 1 August 2025 – final approval hearing in the U.S. District Court, Northern District of California.
  • Late 2025 to early 2026 – payments issued if the court approves the settlement and no appeals delay distribution.

Opt-out and objection options

If you wish to sue Apple separately, you must mail a signed opt-out request postmarked by 2 July 2025. If you support the lawsuit but believe the settlement terms should change, you can file a written objection by the same deadline and may speak at the August 1 hearing.

What sparked the lawsuit

The plaintiffs alleged that “Hey Siri” mis-activations allowed private speech to be recorded and that brief audio clips were sometimes reviewed by third-party contractors. In the complaint they argued, “Apple assured customers that Siri would respect user privacy, yet the assistant routinely captured sensitive conversations without permission.” Apple, while disputing the claims, agreed to pay the settlement to “eliminate the uncertainty, risk, and expense of continued litigation.”

Practical tips for claimants

Retrieve old serial numbers quickly by logging into appleid.apple.com and clicking Devices. Use the same e-mail tied to your Apple ID for easier verification. Filing is free, no lawyer is required, and the form takes under five minutes.

Why this matters

Voice assistants are under growing scrutiny for inadvertent recordings, and regulators worldwide are weighing stricter privacy rules. Similar suits have targeted Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant. Even if the individual payout is modest, claiming your share underscores a broader demand for transparency and stronger safeguards in always-listening technology.

Bottom line: if Siri ever lit up uninvited on one of your devices, take a few minutes before 2 July 2025 to claim up to ₹8,500. Your privacy—and a small cash payment—may be just a form away.

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