Only days left to claim your share of Apple’s $95 million Siri settlement – here’s how before you lose out

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

Think that Apple’s Siri snooped on your private conversations in the past? If so, you may be able to snag a slice of the $95 million that Apple is paying out to settle a class-action lawsuit. But you have to act fast, as the deadline to submit your claim is days away.

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A settlement page recently published in the case of Lopez v. Apple Inc. explains the steps and deadlines for people who want to make a claim. The settlement is geared toward current or former users of a Siri device in the US whose conversations with the voice assistant were captured by Apple or shared with third parties due to an “unintended Siri activation.”

How to tell if you qualify

If you are in the US and used a Siri-supported device between Sept. 17, 2014, and Dec. 31, 2024, you might be eligible for part of the payout from Apple. In May, a notice approved by the US District Court for the Northern District of California was sent to affected parties. Some ZDNET staffers received it with the subject line “Lopez Voice Assistant Class Action Settlement.” 

Also: 5 reasons I turn to ChatGPT every day – from faster research to replacing Siri

To learn more about the claim submission process, check out the FAQ section on the settlement page. If you still have questions, you can also contact the settlement administrator by snail mail or by phone.

How to enter your claim today

If you’re in the qualifying group, you should have received a notice email with a Claim Identification Code and a Confirmation Code alerting you to the settlement. The email should have been sent from an account called info@lopezvoiceassistantsettlement.com. If you received such an email, don’t delete it. You may also want to check your spam folder to see if the message is trapped there. 

Also: 10 easy ways to make Siri work better on your iPhone today

If you didn’t receive an email or even a postcard, which was also sent to affected parties, you can still try to put together a claim.

If you got an email or postcard…

If you received a notice, go to the claim submissions page, enter your claim codes from the email or postcard, and log in to proceed.

If you didn’t get an email or postcard…

If you don’t receive either the email or the postcard, you can enter a new claim at the submission page. You’ll be asked to provide your contact information along with a serial number and model name for the Siri device or proof of purchase. You can add as many as five different devices, including an iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, AirPods, HomePod, or any other gadget that uses Siri.

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Either way, you’ll be asked whether you want to receive your payout by direct deposit to your bank account or by electronic check.

When is the deadline?

Don’t wait too long to file a claim. The deadline is July 2, 2025. 

You can also opt to do nothing, in which case you simply won’t collect anything.

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Following the filing deadline, the court still has to approve the settlement before payouts can begin. A final approval hearing is scheduled for August 1 with US District Judge Jeffrey White in the federal court in Oakland, Calif..

How much do you stand to collect?

The settlement page currently lists a payment cap of $20 per device. So if you submit five different devices, that’s a cool $100. However, the final amount could go up or down based on the total number of valid claims and the number of Siri devices included. Factoring in attorney fees and other costs, though, the final payout per device is more likely to be lower.

The class-action lawsuit, filed in 2019, was initiated by three plaintiffs who alleged that Apple programmed Siri to intercept conversations even when no hot word, such as “Hey Siri,” was spoken. The plaintiffs also claimed that Apple violated their privacy by sharing recordings of the conversations with third-party contractors.

Also: Apple vs. generative AI: Who needs who?

In settling the suit this past January, Apple has denied any wrongdoing on its part. In response to the lawsuit and privacy concerns, an Apple spokesperson shared the following statement with ZDNET this past January:

“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.”

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With such concerns surfacing at that time, Apple did make specific changes to its voice assistant in August 2019. The company suspended the human grading of Siri responses, promised to stop storing recordings of Siri conversations, and altered the Siri training based on audio samples to an opt-in process. Even for people who opted in to allow their conversations to be shared, the recordings from then on were accessible only to Apple employees and not outside contractors.

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Original Source: zdnet

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