Actualités — 2026-07-13

Affichage 8 articlesToutes les actualités

Apple sues OpenAI, claims former staff stole trade secrets to boost AI hardware

Apple sues OpenAI, claims former staff stole trade secrets to boost AI hardwareTechRadar
Apple filed a lawsuit on July 11, 2026, accusing OpenAI and two former Apple engineers—Tang Yew Tan and Chang Liu—of pilfering proprietary designs and confidential data to accelerate OpenAI’s hardware ambitions. The complaint says Liu left Apple with a company laptop, exploited a network flaw, downloaded unreleased product files and bragged about the breach, while Tan allegedly used Apple’s secret metal‑finishing techniques and internal codenames to aid OpenAI. OpenAI’s communications director dismissed the allegations, stating the company has no interest in Apple’s trade secrets. The case, slated for a jury trial, could reshape the fragile partnership between the two tech giants.Lire la suite

Apple sues OpenAI, accusing former staff of stealing trade secrets and poaching talent

Apple sues OpenAI, accusing former staff of stealing trade secrets and poaching talentThe Verge
Apple filed a 41‑page lawsuit against OpenAI, claiming the AI firm lured three former Apple engineers to help it develop its first hardware device. The complaint alleges that the ex‑employees accessed Apple’s cloud storage after leaving, downloaded confidential design files, and coached new hires on how to evade Apple’s exit procedures. Apple also says OpenAI misled a trusted supplier into believing it had permission to use Apple’s proprietary metal‑finishing process. OpenAI responded that it does not seek other companies’ trade secrets and remains focused on its own technology.Lire la suite

Apple Sues OpenAI Over Alleged Theft of Confidential Hardware Designs by Former Engineer

Apple Sues OpenAI Over Alleged Theft of Confidential Hardware Designs by Former EngineerArs Technica2
Apple filed a lawsuit on Friday accusing OpenAI of using trade secrets stolen by former Apple employee Chang Liu. The complaint says Liu discovered an authentication bug after joining OpenAI, used it to download dozens of confidential hardware files, and shared the data while developing AI‑powered devices. Apple seeks injunctions to block OpenAI from using the information and demands damages. The company says the bug was quickly patched and that no other users exploited it, but it alleges a coordinated effort to shortcut Apple’s product development.Lire la suite

Anthropic rolls out rupee pricing for Claude in India

Anthropic rolls out rupee pricing for Claude in IndiaTechCrunch
Anthropic has begun offering its Claude AI service in Indian rupees, marking the first localized pricing for the market that accounts for nearly 6% of the model’s global usage. While the move brings subscription costs into the local currency, the company still relies on credit‑card and app‑store billing, leaving India’s ubiquitous UPI payment system out of the loop. Prices for Claude Pro, Claude Max and team plans now appear on the Indian version of the website, reflecting local taxes and a slight premium over U.S. rates.Lire la suite

Monzo co‑founder Tom Blomfield joins Anthropic’s compute team

Monzo co‑founder Tom Blomfield joins Anthropic’s compute teamThe Next Web
Tom Blomfield, the entrepreneur behind fintech firms Monzo and GoCardless, announced he is leaving his role at Y Combinator to join Anthropic as a senior member of its compute team. The move places the former digital‑bank CEO at the heart of one of AI’s biggest operational challenges—securing massive compute power for next‑generation models. Blomfield framed the job as mission‑critical, citing the potential of powerful AI to improve lives worldwide. Anthropic, already racing to deploy a million Google TPUs and hundreds of thousands of GPUs, is bolstering its talent pool with high‑profile hires as it prepares for a possible public listing.Lire la suite

Meta's New AI Image Model Stands Up to ChatGPT and Gemini in Head‑to‑Head Test

Meta's New AI Image Model Stands Up to ChatGPT and Gemini in Head‑to‑Head TestTechRadar
Meta unveiled a fresh AI image generator and put it through a five‑prompt showdown against OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Gemini Nano Banana 2. The trial covered product ads, wildlife photography, social‑media invites, comic strips and a noir‑cartoon mash‑up. While all three tools produced solid visuals, ChatGPT most consistently hit the mark, Gemini excelled at realism, and Meta delivered the most daring, humor‑laden creations. The results highlight each model’s personality and suggest that the best choice depends on whether users prioritize accuracy, photorealism or creative flair.Lire la suite

Apple sues OpenAI over alleged theft of hardware trade secrets, threatens AI rival’s product timeline

Apple sues OpenAI over alleged theft of hardware trade secrets, threatens AI rival’s product timelineThe Next Web
Apple filed a lawsuit on Friday accusing OpenAI of stealing proprietary hardware trade secrets and poaching former Apple staff. The complaint cites unauthorized access to internal files, a checklist designed to help new hires evade Apple’s security protocols, and a shared manufacturing partner that allegedly used Apple’s metal‑finishing technique. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman argues the case could slow OpenAI’s push to launch a hardware product intended to rival the iPhone, as engineers divert time to legal defenses and tighter internal controls. The dispute arrives as OpenAI prepares for an IPO and a major hardware debut.Lire la suite

Elon Musk and Sam Altman trade barbs on X after court ruling and Apple lawsuit

Elon Musk and Sam Altman trade barbs on X after court ruling and Apple lawsuitThe Next Web
Elon Musk, fresh from a jury verdict that favored Sam Altman in their long-running legal battle, turned to X to label the OpenAI chief a “scammer.” The exchange ignited after Apple sued OpenAI for alleged trade‑secret theft, prompting Musk to launch a public feud. Altman retorted, drawing millions of views, while both companies rolled out flagship AI models—OpenAI’s GPT‑5.6 Sol and SpaceX’s Grok 4.5—underscoring a rivalry that now plays out as much in social media as in the courtroom.Lire la suite