Many people did what you might expect when the email with the subject line “Lopez Voice Assistant Class Action Settlement” first started showing up in inboxes: they ignored it, thinking it was phishing. It smelled a little too good to be true. $95 million. Apple. Siri. a nearly ten-year-old class action lawsuit. Many people removed it without thinking twice.
The fact is, though, that it is real. Additionally, there’s a good chance you were involved without realizing it if you had an iPhone, MacBook, or Apple Watch at any point between September 2014 and the end of 2024.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Case Name | Lopez v. Apple Inc. |
| Case Number | 4:19-cv-04577-JSW |
| Court | United States District Court, Northern District of California |
| Lead Plaintiff | Fumiko Lopez, California resident |
| Filed | 2019 (lawsuit), settled December 31, 2024 |
| Settlement Fund | $95 million |
| Eligible Devices | iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, MacBook, iMac, HomePod, iPod touch, Apple TV |
| Class Period | September 17, 2014 – December 31, 2024 |
| Max Payout Per Device | Up to $20 (pro rata, up to 5 devices) |
| Claim Deadline | July 2, 2025 |
| Final Approval Hearing | August 22, 2025 |
| Payment Distribution Began | January 23, 2026 |
| Apple’s Position | Denies all allegations of wrongdoing |
Fumiko Lopez, a woman from California, started the lawsuit in 2019, claiming that Apple had been using Siri to record and intercept private conversations without the user’s consent, then sharing those recordings with outside parties. The lawsuit presented a startling image of people conversing in their offices, bedrooms, and kitchens, thinking they had privacy, while Siri was unintentionally listening in.
Strong language was used in the complaint to claim that Apple “intentionally, willfully, and knowingly violated consumers’ privacy rights, including within the sanctity of consumers’ own homes.” The kind that propels businesses forward.

For its part, Apple has continuously denied all of this. The company “denies all of the allegations made in the lawsuit and denies that Apple did anything improper or unlawful,” according to the settlement website.In class action settlements, this kind of well-crafted denial is typical; no one acknowledges guilt, a sizable check is written, and everyone moves on.
It’s difficult to avoid getting a little tired of seeing this pattern repeat itself. Florencia Marotta-Wurgler, a law professor at NYU, put it simply: “Companies just settle, it’s done, they don’t admit much and it goes away.” There are still a lot of unanswered questions about what Siri actually heard and who it told.
However, the settlement is valid in and of itself. Checks, ACH deposits, and digital payments were distributed to qualified claimants starting on January 23, 2026. The settlement administrators advise people to check their spam folders before assuming something went wrong if they chose a digital check and haven’t seen anything yet. Many people may be sitting on unread emails at the moment.
In order to qualify, you had to have purchased or owned a Siri-enabled device during the class period and had an inadvertent Siri activation during a private or confidential conversation. The crucial requirement is that you self-certify under oath on the claim form.
You are not obliged to provide a transcript or a recording. You’re confirming that it occurred based on your personal experience. That’s not a high bar for the majority of regular Apple users, considering how frequently Siri has been known to activate unexpectedly—mid-sentence, mid-meeting, mid-argument.
For a maximum of five devices, the maximum payout is $20 per device. In the best-case scenario, that comes to $100, but the actual sum will depend on how many legitimate claims are ultimately submitted. Each individual share decreases as more people make claims. Given the sheer number of Apple devices in use over a ten-year period, the response was likely significant. It’s a pro-rata distribution, which means the math works against you if the response is high.
This is more than just one settlement; it’s a larger story. Marotta-Wurgler points out that because damages are hard to measure, privacy-related lawsuits have historically had trouble gaining traction in American courts. What is the legal value of a private conversation? The $95 million settlement in this case indicates that something is changing: businesses are growing more circumspect, courts are becoming more accommodating, and customers are growing more inclined to rebel.
It remains to be seen if this change results in a long-term change in the way tech companies manage voice data. The Lopez voice assistant settlement is, for the time being at least, as legitimate as these things get: actual funds, actual procedures, actual deadlines, and an important question: did you look in your spam folder?
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