A blog about Technology, new invention and ways of looking.
Samsung over Apple logo

Apple's time as the top smartphone maker in the world has come to an end for the time being.

According to a new report from tech market research firm Counterpoint, Samsung has reclaimed its title from Apple as the mobile industry's global leader in Q2 2026. And it seems Apple's loss is at least partially attributable to the ongoing global RAM shortage, which has led to fewer people buying phones.

"The outlook for the rest of 2026 remains challenging," Counterpoint says in its report. The research firm expects a roughly 14 percent decline in global smartphone shipments for the year, with price increases putting pressure on shoppers.

Samsung and Apple have been neck-and-neck for years in the race as the world's most popular smartphone manufacturer. At the start of the year, Apple overcame Samsung to become the industry leader on the strength of record-breaking iPhone sales.

However, the latest data shows that Samsung has had a strong start in 2026, propelling the company back to the top. Samsung now has a 24 percent global mobile market share, the strongest of any of the top five brands in the category. Samsung’s Galaxy S26 line was the driver behind shipment growth, according to the report. Counterpoint says that the Galaxy S26 Ultra model released in March emerged as the "standout performer."

Although Apple dropped to second, the company's market share actually grew overall in Q2 2026. The Counterpoint report found that the company grew 3 percent year-over-year during the quarter and even achieved a record 20 percent global market share. The iPhone 17 remained as Apple's biggest product line and was the "top-shipped global model."

However, Apple did face some adversity due to global RAM shortage spurred by the AI boom.

Counterpoint's report says legacy iPhone models "faced softer demand, as component allocation prioritized current-generation devices amid memory-related supply constraints." The company also faced declining shipments within the Chinese market as "China remained a relative soft spot" for the company, according to Counterpoint.

As for the RAM shortage, Samsung's smartphone lines likely benefited, as the company is also a memory manufacturer itself. Still, the company did slightly raise its prices in February, and rumor has it the company could potentially raise mobile prices further in the near future (the company is expected to launch its new foldables at a July 22 event in London).

Notably, Samsung avoided price increases on its Ultra model, which did particularly well this quarter. Apple has so far managed to avoid price increases on its iPhone 17 line, despite hiking prices on its MacBooks and iPads in June.

It should also be noted that Samsung unveiled its latest Galaxy smartphone models in February of this year. The Galaxy S26 line, according to the report, was a major factor in Samsung regaining its top spot. Apple's new iPhone line, iPhone 18, isn't expected until September, and it will likely play a major role in Apple's future market share.



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An illustrated

House of the Dragon Season 3 is here, and you know what that means: It's time to take a climb into the very tangled branches of the Targaryen family tree.

Over the first two seasons of House of the Dragon, some of these branches have been pruned. (RIP to the many Targs who've perished in this bloody show.) However, Season 2 also added its fair share of new offshoots, further complicating the knotted web between Houses Targaryen, Velaryon, and Hightower. Season 3 has complicated it even further, with new deaths and the face reveal of one Daeron Targaryen. If you're looking for a refresher on that web as you head into the second half of Season 3, we've got you covered.

Below, you'll find the Targaryen family tree as it stands as of House of the Dragon Season 3, episode 4, as well as a rundown of the characters and how they connect.

An illustrated Targaryen family tree.
Credit: Ian Moore / Mashable

Which Targaryens have died since Season 2?

There were two key deaths in the Targaryen family in Season 2: one on the Greens' side and one on the Blacks'.

Queen Rhaenyra Targaryen's (Emma D'Arcy) camp lost Princess Rhaenys (Eve Best), also known as the Queen Who Never Was. Meanwhile, King Aegon II Targaryen (Tom Glynn-Carney) and Queen Helaena (Phia Saban) lost their young son Jaehaerys when gold cloak Blood (Sam C. Wilson) and rat catcher Cheese (Mark Stobbart) assassinated him on Prince Daemon's (Matt Smith) orders.

There are still plenty of Targaryens left standing, though. Here's who to watch out for in Season 3.

The Targaryen family tree: Rhaenyra, Daemon, and their children

Matt Smith, Phoebe Campbell, Emma D'Arcy, Harry Collett, and Bethany Antonia in "House of the Dragon."
Matt Smith, Phoebe Campbell, Emma D'Arcy, Harry Collett, and Bethany Antonia in "House of the Dragon." Credit: Composite: Mashable / Images: HBO

Rhaenyra heads up the Team Black branch of the Targaryen family tree, with her husband/uncle Daemon by her side. (It was touch and go for a minute in Season 2, but after a life-changing study abroad trip to Harrenhal, complete with witches and visions, Daemon is finally ready to accept Rhaenyra as his queen.)

Their two young sons, Aegon and Viserys, are on their way to Pentos for protection after a brief pit stop in the Vale. However, Rhaenyra and Daemon's children from their prior marriages are still in Westeros and locked in on Rhaenyra's fight for the throne.

Rhaenyra's son Jacaerys (Harry Collett) and Daemon's daughter Baela (Bethany Antonia) are both dragonriders. Daemon's other daughter, Rhaena (Phoebe Campbell), doesn't have a dragon, which is why she was sent off as Aegon and Viserys' guardian. However, when they went to Pentos, she remained behind in the Vale, hoping to tame its wild dragon Sheepstealer. As of Season 3, she's successfully claimed Sheepstealer, but at a cost: He went rogue during the Battle of the Gullet, and his interference helped lead to Jace's tragic death. Now, Rhaenyra wants Sheepstealer's rider's head, and only Daemon and Lady Jeyne Arryn (Amanda Collin) know the truth of her identity.

The Targaryen family tree: Alicent Hightower and her children

Tom Glynn-Carney, Olivia Cooke, Phia Saban, and Ewan Mitchell in "House of the Dragon."
Tom Glynn-Carney, Olivia Cooke, Phia Saban, and Ewan Mitchell in "House of the Dragon." Credit: Composite: Mashable / Images: HBO

Dowager Queen Alicent Hightower (Olivia Cooke) remains the matriarch of Team Green, although she's growing increasingly regretful about her role in the war for succession. (So regretful, in fact, that she's offered to surrender the Iron Throne to Rhaenyra.) She had four children with the late King Viserys (Paddy Considine).

The eldest, Aegon, remains King of Westeros. His younger brother Aemond (Ewan Mitchell) attempted to kill him in a dragon dogfight at the Battle of Rook's Rest, and once Aegon recovered from his worst injuries, he fled King's Landing with the help of Larys Strong (Matthew Needham). Now Aemond is Prince Regent, and Alicent is trying her best to get herself and her daughter Helaena out of harm's way.

Alicent's youngest son Daeron (Benjamin Evan Ainsworth) makes his official House of the Dragon debut in Season 3, episode 4, although he's been hiding in plain sight since the Season 3 premiere. He's a ward of House Hightower and squire to Lord Ormund Hightower (James Norton), who's engineering his own plot — involving a fake Daeron — to place him on the throne.

The Hightower family tree: Otto, Gwayne, and Ormund

James Norton, Olivia Cooke, Rhys Ifans, and Freddie Fox in "House of the Dragon."
James Norton, Olivia Cooke, Rhys Ifans, and Freddie Fox in "House of the Dragon." Credit: Composite: Mashable / Images: HBO

In addition to Alicent, the rest of House Hightower continues to be a major player in House of the Dragon. Her father, Otto Hightower (Rhys Ifans), former hand of the King, was the first Green loyalist to be executed under Rhaenyra's reign. Elsewhere, Alicent's brother Gwayne (Freddie Fox) has been traipsing around the Seven Kingdoms with Ser Criston Cole (Fabien Frankel), a nightmare we wouldn't wish on even our worst enemies.

House of the Dragon Season 3 also introduces a new member of the Hightower family: Lord Ormund, head of House Hightower. His late father Hobert (Steffan Rhodri) was Otto's oldest brother, making Ormund Alicent and Gwayne's cousin.

The Velaryon family tree: Corlys and his sons Alyn and Addam

Steve Toussaint, Abubakar Salim, and Clinton Liberty in "House of the Dragon."
Steve Toussaint, Abubakar Salim, and Clinton Liberty in "House of the Dragon." Credit: Composite: Mashable / Images: HBO

Rhaenyra's Hand is Corlys Velaryon (Steve Toussaint), also known as the Sea Snake due to his naval prowess. Over the course of House of the Dragon, he's lost his wife Rhaenys, as well as their children Laena (Nanna Blondell) and Laenor (John Macmillan).

However, Season 2 revealed that Laena and Laenor weren't Corlys' only descendants. He also has two bastard sons, Alyn of Hull (Abubakar Salim) and Addam of Hull (Clinton Liberty). Their mother Marilda, unseen in the show, was a shipwright. House of the Dragon primarily refers to Marilda in the past tense, implying she is dead, hence why she's greyed out in our family tree. However, by this point in Fire and Blood, she is still alive.

While Corlys didn't truly acknowledge Alyn and Addam prior to Season 2, the pair are now a much more prominent part of his life — and the show. Alyn is a notable sailor in Corlys' fleet, and Addam became a dragonrider. Thanks to his Valyrian blood, he now rides Seasmoke, Laenor's old dragon.

The dragonseeds: Addam, Ulf the White, and Hugh Hammer

Kieran Bew, Tom Bennett, and Clinton Liberty in "House of the Dragon."
Kieran Bew, Tom Bennett, and Clinton Liberty in "House of the Dragon." Credit: Composite: Mashable / Images: HBO

Addam isn't the only new dragonrider to join Rhaenyra's ranks in Season 2. Smallfolk Ulf the White (Tom Bennett) and Hugh Hammer (Kieran Bew) also claimed dragons. Ulf rides Silverwing, the dragon of Rhaenyra's grandmother Alysanne, while Hugh rides Vermithor, the dragon of Rhaenyra's grandfather Jaehaerys. The pair, like Addam, are bastards of Valyrian blood, earning them the nickname of "dragonseeds." While they haven't been legitimized as Targaryens, they will certainly have a large role to play in the battles to come.

House of the Dragon Season 3 premieres June 21 at 9 p.m. ET on HBO and HBO Max, with a new episode every Sunday.

UPDATE: Jul. 12, 2026, 10:00 p.m. EDT This article has been updated to reflect the events of the first four episodes of Season 3.

UPDATE: Jun. 26, 2026, 4:02 p.m. EDT A previous version of the family tree did not show Rhaenys, Hobert, or Marilda as deceased the way they are in the show. It has since been updated.



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Photo Illustrations Meta Launches Muse Image

Meta's Must Image tool, which launched last Tuesday, is now being shuttered by the company, according to Reuters.

The social media giant released a statement on Friday announcing it would discontinue the feature: "Our intent was to provide a useful creative tool and to give people control over whether their public ​content could be referenced in this way. We've ​heard the feedback that this feature missed the mark, so ⁠it's no longer available."

Meta launched Muse Image as part of a suite of new AI tools. Designed for Instagram and WhatsApp users, it lets them touch up, alter, or add 3D effects to new photos. Muse Image took things a step further, allowing users to use photos from public-facing Instagram accounts as reference material for generative AI. Worse still, they enabled the feature by default, so if you didn't want your personal photos being used as AI fodder, you had to either make your account private or locate the specific setting that would toggle the feature off.

Unsurprisingly, the backlash came hard and fast. 

But it was actors and other famous people with massive followings and public accounts who led the charge. Hacks star Hannah Einbinder took to her Instagram stories to urge her followers not to use the feature, prompting the Screen Actors Guild to take action as well, urging its members to "protect your likeness" by deactivating it. To its credit, though, this time around Meta listened.

There's no shortage of controversy regarding generative AI and copyright issues, whether we're talking about companies asking child actors to sign away their voice rights or major record labels suing music generators over creative use, but leave it to Meta to carelessly trip every wire and provoke a backlash so severe that they were immediately forced to back down.

Expect more heated battles over image rights, privacy, and generative AI as these tools only become more powerful and more ubiquitous, but in the meantime, let's all be glad that Meta was receptive to the negative feedback.



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Cybersecurity lock icons in digital data tunnel - stock photo

A French court ordered upstream internet intermediaries like Google and Cloudflare to actively block access to prominent pirating and illegal streaming sites at the request of sports rights holders. But Google is pushing back against this judgment, and its reasoning is surprisingly sound. 

The landmark decision places direct responsibility on upstream internet providers rather than on illegal streaming services, which are notoriously difficult to bring to justice in a local court, especially when they exploit loopholes in international law or employ backup domains and servers that go online when their main platforms are blocked.

To effectively block access to these sites, which operate across multiple domains, servers, and web addresses, Google would have to use a combination of DNS filtering and IP- and VPN-blocking, but these catch-all approaches are guaranteed to impact law-abiding users and web hosts as well. To analogize, it's a bit like trying to catch a minnow with a giant trawling net. At the end of the day, you may have all the minnows in the sea, but you're also going to harm the dolphins, whales, and other fish species.

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Worse still, savvy internet pirates have multiple ways to circumvent these actions, meaning the minnows might still escape while the larger fish (ordinary internet users) get caught up in the filtering. 

Google said as much in their submission to the EU court:

"Blocking DNS resolvers, IPs, VPNs, is ineffective, as it does not remove content at all and is easily circumvented by using alternative DNS resolvers. It is disproportionate, catching lawful services, raising extra-territoriality concerns and blocking entire domains. Similarly, blocking IP addresses neither removes the content nor achieves proportionate outcomes, as many lawful services may be using the same IP address."

Google's report goes on to cite real-world harms caused by these blanket bans, including inadvertently blocking Google Drive access and restricting access to websites such as Amnesty International, the ACLU, UNICEF, UNHCR, the Australian Senate, and Stanford Law Review.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation has echoed Google's criticisms, arguing that the EU's attempts to legislate the internet "keep EU users locked up behind big tech's gates." The EFF also took a strong stand against the automated filtering mandates argued for in Article 13 of the EU Copyright Directive

It's also looking like these concerns are coming to the United States, as a House IP Subcommittee met on June 30 to discuss exactly the kind of upstream content bans enforced by the EU. California Representative Darrell Issa has already pledged to introduce exactly such a bill

Not coincidentally, these legislative efforts are ramping up right as illegal streaming and downloading experiences a resurgence in popularity (a "Piracy Renaissance," according to one publication), perhaps not in spite of a massive spike in online streaming platforms but because of these platforms and their ongoing efforts to raise prices, introduce advertising, and fragment their content offerings

Expect this debate to heat up as more and more tech companies are pulled into the argument, and as the interests of internet giants like Google are pitted against the copyright claims of giant media broadcasters.



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A phone with the Pips logo.

Welcome to your guide to Pips, the latest game in the New York Times catalogue.

Released in August 2025, Pips puts a unique spin on dominoes, creating a fun single-player experience that could become your next daily gaming habit.

Currently, if you're stuck, the game only offers to reveal the entire puzzle, forcing you to move on to the next difficulty level and start over. However, we have you covered! Below are piecemeal answers that will serve as hints so that you can find your way through each difficulty level.

How to play Pips

If you've ever played dominoes, you'll have a passing familiarity with how Pips is played. As we've shared in our previous hints stories for Pips, the tiles, like dominoes, are placed vertically or horizontally and connect with each other. The main difference between a traditional game of dominoes and Pips is the color-coded conditions you have to address. The touching tiles don't necessarily have to match.

The conditions you have to meet are specific to the color-coded spaces. For example, if it provides a single number, every side of a tile in that space must add up to the number provided. It is possible — and common — for only half a tile to be within a color-coded space.

Here are common examples you'll run into across the difficulty levels:

  • Number: All the pips in this space must add up to the number.

  • Equal: Every domino half in this space must be the same number of pips.

  • Not Equal: Every domino half in this space must have a completely different number of pips.

  • Less than: Every domino half in this space must add up to less than the number.

  • Greater than: Every domino half in this space must add up to more than the number.

If an area does not have any color coding, it means there are no conditions on the portions of dominoes within those spaces.

Easy difficulty hints, answers for July 12 Pips

Greater Than (4): Everything in this space must be greater than 4. The answer is 3-5, placed horizontally.

Number (3): Everything in this space must add up to 3. The answer is 2-3, placed horizontally.

Number (9): Everything in this space must add up to 9. The answer is 6-6, placed horizontally; 3-1, placed horizontally.

Number (3): Everything in this space must add up to 3. The answer is 0-2, placed vertically; 3-1, placed horizontally.

Medium difficulty hints, answers for July 12 Pips

Number (8): Everything in this space must add up to 8. The answer is 5-3, placed vertically.

Number (2): Everything in this space must add up to 2. The answer is 0-0, placed vertically.

Number (2): Everything in this space must add up to 2. The answer is 2-5, placed vertically.

Number (7): Everything in this space must add up to 7. The answer is 2-5, placed vertically; 4-1, placed horizontally; 1-0, placed vertically.

Equal (4): Everything in this space must be equal to 4. The answer is 4-1, placed horizontally; 4-0, placed vertically.

Equal (0): Everything in this space must be equal to 0. The answer is 4-0, placed vertically; 1-0, placed vertically.

Hard difficulty hints, answers for July 12 Pips

Number (3): Everything in this space must add up to 3. The answer is 3-2, placed vertically.

Number (5): Everything in this space must add up to 5. The answer is 5-4, placed vertically.

Number (0): Everything in this space must add up to 0. The answer is 0-2, placed horizontally.

Number (2): Everything in this space must add up to 2. The answer is 0-2, placed horizontally.

Number (2): Everything in this space must add up to 2. The answer is 3-2, placed vertically.

Number (4): Everything in this space must add up to 4. The answer is 5-4, placed vertically.

Number (4): Everything in this space must add up to 4. The answer is 4-3, placed vertically.

Number (2): Everything in this space must add up to 2. The answer is 2-5, placed vertically.

Number (5): Everything in this space must add up to 5. The answer is 5-1, placed horizontally.

Number (1): Everything in this space must add up to 1. The answer is 5-1, placed horizontally.

Number (0): Everything in this space must add up to 0. The answer is 0-3, placed vertically.

Number (3): Everything in this space must add up to 3. The answer is 3-6, placed horizontally.

Number (18): Everything in this space must add up to 18. The answer is 4-3, placed vertically; 3-6, placed horizontally; 2-5, placed vertically; 4-1, placed vertically.

Number (3): Everything in this space must add up to 3. The answer is 0-3, placed vertically.

Number (0): Everything in this space must add up to 0. The answer is 0-1, placed vertically.

Number (0): Everything in this space must add up to 0. The answer is 0-5, placed vertically.

Number (1): Everything in this space must add up to 1. The answer is 4-1, placed vertically.

Number (3): Everything in this space must add up to 3. The answer is 3-5, placed vertically.

Number (1): Everything in this space must add up to 1. The answer is 0-1, placed vertically.

Number (5): Everything in this space must add up to 5. The answer is 0-5, placed vertically.

Number (1): Everything in this space must add up to 1. The answer is 1-3, placed vertically.

Number (5): Everything in this space must add up to 5. The answer is 3-5, placed vertically.

Number (1): Everything in this space must add up to 1. The answer is 1-2, placed horizontally.

Number (2): Everything in this space must add up to 2. The answer is 1-2, placed horizontally.

Number (3): Everything in this space must add up to 3. The answer is 1-3, placed vertically.

Number (2): Everything in this space must add up to 2. The answer is 2-4, placed horizontally.

Number (4): Everything in this space must add up to 4. The answer is 2-4, placed horizontally.

Number (4): Everything in this space must add up to 4. The answer is 4-0, placed horizontally.

Number (0): Everything in this space must add up to 0. The answer is 4-0, placed horizontally.

If you're looking for more puzzles, Mashable's got games now! Check out our games hub for Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more.



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CEO of OpenAI Sam Altman talks to reporters following a meeting with Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) at the Dirksen Senate Office building in Washington, DC on June 3, 2026.

Apple and OpenAI are heading to court.

On Friday, July 10, Apple sued OpenAI, the artificial intelligence company led by CEO Sam Altman, and two former Apple employees, accusing the ChatGPT maker of obtaining confidential Apple information to help build its own consumer hardware.

The lawsuit names OpenAI’s commercial and nonprofit entities, its hardware company io Products, OpenAI Chief Hardware Officer Tang Yew Tan, and former Apple engineer Chang Liu. It was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

“This case is about Apple’s former employees stealing Apple’s trade secrets for the benefit of OpenAI,” Apple said in the complaint.

The filing contains claims involving secret project names, confidential presentations, Apple-issued laptops, physical hardware components, supplier relationships, and even instructions for getting through an Apple exit interview. It also arrives as OpenAI prepares to release its first consumer device with former Apple design chief Jony Ive.

There is a lot going on. Here are the 8 most important things to understand about the lawsuit, what Apple is actually alleging, and what could happen next.

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1. Apple is accusing OpenAI of more than simply hiring its employees

The first important distinction is that it is generally legal for one company to recruit employees from a competitor.

A former Apple engineer is allowed to accept a job at OpenAI. That engineer is also allowed to use general knowledge, professional experience, and skills developed over the course of a career. Apple does not own everything a person learned while working there.

A trade secret is different— it is valuable information that is not publicly known and that a company has taken reasonable steps to protect. That could include an unreleased product design, a private manufacturing process, a confidential list of suppliers, or technical specifications for a component that has not yet reached the market.

Apple alleges that OpenAI did not merely hire people with experience. It says OpenAI used those employees and its recruiting process to obtain protected documents, designs, physical parts, manufacturing knowledge, and information about unreleased products.

In plain language, Apple’s argument is essentially this: OpenAI was free to hire Apple engineers, but it was not free to ask them to bring Apple’s files and hardware along with them.

That remains Apple’s version of events. A complaint lays out what the plaintiff says happened; it is not a court ruling that those allegations are true. OpenAI's Director of Strategic Communications Drew Pusateri has denied wanting or using Apple’s confidential information with a statement on X:

2. The lawsuit is really about OpenAI becoming a hardware competitor

Apple and OpenAI were publicly working together only two years ago.

In 2024, Apple announced that ChatGPT would be integrated into Siri, Apple’s systemwide Writing Tools, and other Apple Intelligence features. The arrangement allowed users to send certain questions to ChatGPT directly from an iPhone, iPad, or Mac.

The relationship became more complicated when OpenAI moved beyond software and began developing its own consumer device.

In 2025, OpenAI acquired io Products, the hardware startup created by Ive, Tan, and several other former Apple employees, in a deal valued at roughly $6.5 billion. Ive, who helped design products including the iPhone, iMac, and Apple Watch during his time at Apple, is working with OpenAI on the device but is not personally named as a defendant in Apple’s lawsuit.

OpenAI has offered few concrete details about what it is making. The company has described the project as a new kind of AI device that would move beyond the familiar structure of screens, apps, keyboards, and smartphones. Its first hardware product is expected as soon as the end of 2026.

That context matters because Apple is not suing over information used to improve ChatGPT; rather, it alleges that its secrets were taken to help build physical products that could compete with Apple’s hardware business.

Apple says the information at issue covers product architecture, battery systems, circuit boards, component selection, manufacturing equipment, metal-finishing methods, supply-chain relationships, and unreleased product plans.

3. Apple says OpenAI turned job interviews into information-gathering sessions

Some of the lawsuit’s most striking allegations involve how OpenAI interviewed Apple employees.

Tan spent more than 24 years at Apple and most recently served as vice president of product design for the iPhone and Apple Watch. He later helped found io and is now OpenAI’s chief hardware officer. Because he had worked on confidential Apple programs, Apple says he knew the company’s internal terminology, project names, suppliers, and development process.

According to the lawsuit, Tan used that knowledge while interviewing current Apple employees for jobs at OpenAI.

Apple alleges that he referred to at least one unreleased Apple project by its internal codename before asking a candidate about the company’s plans for it. To someone outside Apple, the name would have meant very little. To an employee working on the project, it would have signaled exactly what Tan wanted to discuss.

Candidates were also allegedly required to prepare “Technical Deep Dive” presentations about their work. Apple says the instructions asked for details including how components were selected, which vendors were used, what software supported system integration, and how engineers communicated with suppliers.

Those questions may sound like ordinary technical interview questions. Apple’s argument is that, when directed at current employees working on secret projects, they were asking candidates to disclose information that belonged to Apple.

The filing also alleges that Tan told candidates to bring “actual parts” from Apple to their interviews for “show and tell” sessions. Those parts allegedly included batteries, logic boards, systems-in-package, shields, and other physical components.

One candidate appeared surprised by the request, according to messages quoted in the filing, and said they “didn’t even know we could take those from the office.”

Apple says the interview process also generated evidence that now appears in the lawsuit. In one example, an employee allegedly began screenshotting and downloading files related to a highly confidential Apple project in the hours before an OpenAI interview. During the interview, Tan allegedly asked about that same project.

Apple says it found the activity by reviewing access records and server logs connected to its own systems. In other words, the candidate allegedly used an Apple computer to retrieve the files, leaving a record inside the systems from which the information was being taken.

4. Apple says one former engineer kept a laptop and continued accessing its files

The lawsuit’s other central figure is Liu, who spent more than eight years at Apple as a senior system electrical engineer working on the iPhone before joining OpenAI in January 2026.

Apple alleges that Liu failed to return an Apple-issued laptop when he left the company. It also says he later discovered an authentication vulnerability that continued to give him access to Apple’s cloud-based file storage after his employment had ended.

According to the complaint, Liu did not report the apparent security problem. Apple says he instead used it to continue accessing confidential engineering materials while already employed by OpenAI.

The lawsuit alleges that Liu downloaded dozens of files containing technical specifications, engineering presentations, circuit-board information, and details about unannounced products. One compilation allegedly contained more than 1,000 pages of technical materials.

Apple also points to messages Liu allegedly sent after discovering that his access still worked. In one, he reportedly wrote to an Apple employee: “LOL, I found out I can access the [server], so funny.”

That detail is important because it could help Apple argue that the access was not accidental. Accidentally discovering that an old login still functions is one thing. Continuing to use it to download files after acknowledging the unexpected access is another.

Apple also alleges that Liu helped another Apple employee prepare for an OpenAI interview. He allegedly directed her toward specific confidential folders, advised her about what information to review, and discussed how files could be copied without attracting the attention of Apple’s security team.

The complaint says Liu eventually encouraged the employee to stop communicating through Apple devices and move their conversation to LINE, a separate messaging app. The employee later joined OpenAI. Liu has not publicly responded to the allegations.

5. Apple says recruits were coached on how to avoid its exit-security procedures

When an employee leaves a company like Apple, the departure involves more than returning a badge and laptop.

The company may disable system access, examine recent downloads, recover devices, remind the employee of confidentiality agreements, and ask questions about where the person is going next. These procedures are designed to make sure confidential materials do not leave with the employee.

Apple alleges that OpenAI knew how those procedures worked and coached recruits on how to navigate or avoid them.

According to the filing, Tan circulated an internal Apple document marked “Need to Know” that explained Apple’s security process for departing employees. Apple says the document was intended only for certain Apple managers but was shared with recruits before they had even told Apple they were leaving.

That would mean the recruits allegedly knew in advance what Apple’s security team might inspect, what questions might be asked, and when their access could be cut off.

Apple also claims OpenAI advised departing employees not to disclose that they had accepted jobs with the company. Recruits were allegedly told not to sign documents during Apple exit interviews and to contact OpenAI immediately if Apple asked them to sign anything.

The lawsuit says Apple found a pattern among employees leaving for OpenAI: some skipped exit interviews, ignored messages from Apple’s security team, provided little or no notice, or otherwise avoided the usual departure process.

Apple is using those examples to argue that the alleged conduct was coordinated rather than the work of one person independently deciding to take files.

OpenAI now employs more than 400 former Apple employees, according to the complaint. That number is not evidence of wrongdoing by itself. The significant question is whether any of those workers brought protected Apple information with them and whether OpenAI knowingly requested, received, or used it.

6. Apple says OpenAI also went through its suppliers

Apple’s allegations extend beyond employees and interviews.

Modern hardware companies rely on complicated networks of suppliers that make batteries, chips, displays, enclosures, circuit boards, and manufacturing equipment. Apple also develops specialized processes with some of those partners that are not available to competitors.

The lawsuit alleges that OpenAI used information from former Apple employees to approach companies within that supply chain.

In one example, Apple says OpenAI asked a trusted manufacturing partner to demonstrate a proprietary metal-finishing technique. The technique allegedly involved a multi-step process developed by Apple to produce a particular appearance and physical finish on its devices.

Apple says the supplier was contractually prohibited from performing that work for other companies. OpenAI allegedly led the partner to believe that Apple had authorized the demonstration. According to Apple, it had not.

The complaint also says OpenAI approached a longtime Apple supplier involved in battery and power manufacturing. Former Apple employees allegedly used internal terminology to ask targeted questions about specific components and processes.

This part of the lawsuit could be particularly important because it moves the allegations beyond files sitting on an employee’s computer. Apple is claiming that confidential information was put to practical use while OpenAI was developing hardware.

OpenAI has not announced the design or component list for its device, so it is not publicly possible to determine whether any Apple technology appears in it. That is one reason Apple says it needs the lawsuit’s discovery process.

7. Apple wants access to the evidence behind OpenAI’s device

Apple says it contacted OpenAI in February and asked the company to investigate its concerns. According to the lawsuit, OpenAI did not respond. Apple filed its complaint roughly five months later.

Apple is asking for damages, but money is only part of what it wants.

The company is also seeking an injunction, which is a court order requiring someone to do or stop doing something. Apple wants OpenAI barred from possessing, using, or disclosing its alleged trade secrets. It also wants confidential materials returned and evidence connected to the case preserved.

“Preserved” means the defendants could be required to retain relevant emails, messages, files, designs, access logs, and internal documents rather than deleting or changing them while the lawsuit moves forward.

Apple also expects to use discovery. Discovery is the part of a lawsuit in which each side can demand relevant evidence from the other. Depending on what a judge allows, Apple could seek internal OpenAI communications, recruiting records, design documents, supplier correspondence, and information showing how the company developed its device.

That does not automatically mean OpenAI will have to prove every component was developed independently before its product can launch. Apple would have to persuade the court that its evidence supports such restrictions, and OpenAI will have opportunities to challenge the allegations and the scope of Apple’s requests.

Still, the timing is significant. OpenAI is moving toward its first hardware release, and Apple is asking a court to determine whether any part of that hardware operation depends on confidential Apple information.

Apple describes the conduct in sweeping terms, alleging that OpenAI’s hardware business is “rotten to its core” because of its supposed reliance on misappropriated trade secrets. OpenAI has denied that it wants another company’s secrets, and none of Apple’s claims has yet been proven in court.

Online, the immediate reaction treated the lawsuit like a particularly messy Silicon Valley breakup. Others focused on the employees at the center of Apple’s allegations, questioning how someone could spend decades helping build the company’s most important products and then (allegedly) carry confidential information into a rival operation.

8. OpenAI is already fighting lawsuits on several fronts

Apple’s complaint arrives while OpenAI is dealing with legal challenges involving trade secrets, copyright, its corporate structure, and the safety of ChatGPT.

The closest comparison is a lawsuit Elon Musk’s xAI filed against OpenAI in September 2025, accusing the company of stealing confidential information after recruiting employees from the rival AI company. The case also focused partly on information disclosed during the hiring process.

A federal judge dismissed the original complaint on in February, but allowed xAI to revise its claims. The judge eventually dismissed the lawsuit with prejudice on June 15, finding that xAI had not shown OpenAI encouraged a former engineer to reveal trade secrets or that OpenAI employees knew he might have done so.

Musk separately sued OpenAI, CEO Sam Altman, and President Greg Brockman over claims that they had abandoned the organization’s original nonprofit mission. A federal jury ruled against Musk in May after finding that he waited too long to file the case. The verdict turned on the statute of limitations and did not decide whether OpenAI had actually violated its founding commitments. Musk says he plans to appeal.

OpenAI is also facing a growing group of cases focused on the safety of ChatGPT.

Florida sued OpenAI and Altman on June 1, accusing the company of aggressively marketing ChatGPT to children while concealing serious risks and disregarding safety warnings. The state alleges that the chatbot facilitated harmful behavior, including self-harm and violence, and collected information from minors without meaningful parental consent. OpenAI has disputed the copyright allegations and has said it continues to strengthen safeguards involving minors, self-harm, and threats of violence.

The government of British Columbia also announced July 7 that it had retained lawyers in Canada and California to explore legal action against OpenAI following the February mass shooting at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School (the province has not yet filed its own lawsuit). It says internal OpenAI reports showed that the company’s safety teams flagged violent prompts connected to the shooter months before the attack but did not notify law enforcement. Families affected by the shooting have already filed separate cases against OpenAI in California.

Meanwhile, The New York Times, the New York Daily News, authors, and other publishers are pursuing copyright cases that accuse OpenAI of improperly using protected material to train its AI models.

It's clear OpenAI is actively trying to build the future. But, increasingly, it is also being asked to defend how it built it.



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Wordle game on a smartphone

Today's Wordle answer should be easy to solve if you're a bird watcher.

If you just want to be told today's word, you can jump to the bottom of this article for today's Wordle solution revealed. But if you'd rather solve it yourself, keep reading for some clues, tips, and strategies to assist you.

Where did Wordle come from?

Originally created by engineer Josh Wardle as a gift for his partner, Wordle rapidly spread to become an international phenomenon, with thousands of people around the globe playing every day. Alternate Wordle versions created by fans also sprang up, including battle royale Squabble, music identification game Heardle, and variations like Dordle and Quordle that make you guess multiple words at once

Wordle eventually became so popular that it was purchased by the New York Times, and TikTok creators even livestream themselves playing.

What's the best Wordle starting word?

The best Wordle starting word is the one that speaks to you. But if you prefer to be strategic in your approach, we have a few ideas to help you pick a word that might help you find the solution faster. One tip is to select a word that includes at least two different vowels, plus some common consonants like S, T, R, or N.

What happened to the Wordle archive?

The entire archive of past Wordle puzzles was originally available for anyone to enjoy whenever they felt like it, but it was later taken down, with the website's creator stating it was done at the request of the New York Times. However, the New York Times then rolled out its own Wordle Archive, available only to NYT Games subscribers.

Is Wordle getting harder?

It might feel like Wordle is getting harder, but it actually isn't any more difficult than when it first began. You can turn on Wordle's Hard Mode if you're after more of a challenge, though.

Here's a subtle hint for today's Wordle answer:

Bird-related.

Does today's Wordle answer have a double letter?

The letter A appears twice.

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Today's Wordle is a 5-letter word that starts with...

Today's Wordle starts with the letter A.

The Wordle answer today is...

Get your last guesses in now, because it's your final chance to solve today's Wordle before we reveal the solution.

Drumroll please!

The solution to today's Wordle is...

AVIAN

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Reporting by Chance Townsend, Caitlin Welsh, Sam Haysom, Amanda Yeo, Shannon Connellan, Cecily Mauran, Mike Pearl, and Adam Rosenberg contributed to this article.

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