Siri class action lawsuit greenlit, billions at stake

Siri class action lawsuit greenlit, billions at stake

Spread the love

A judge has cleared the way for as many as 3 million Apple device users in Illinois to be included in a class action lawsuit accusing Apple of violating Illinois’ stringent biometrics privacy law by allegedly recording people using their Siri A.I. assistant, putting potentially hundreds of billions of dollars at stake.

On Jan. 29, Cook County Circuit Judge Michael T. Mullen agreed to certify the plaintiffs’ class, clearing the lawsuit to proceed as a class action.

The lawsuit dates to 2019, when attorneys from the firms of Miller Shakman Levine & Feldman, of Chicago; Forde & O’Meara, of Chicago; and Silver Golub & Teitell, of Stamford, Connecticut, filed suit in Cook County Circuit Court against the Cupertino, California-based tech giant.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of named plaintiffs Deborah Zaluda, Catherine Cooke, David Cooke, James Cooke, Lori Cooke, Savanna Cooke and Paul Darby.

However, from the start, the plaintiffs have sought to expand their action to include a class of potentially millions of other plaintiffs, which could, in turn, generate a potentially massive payday worth many millions of dollars.

The lawsuit targets Apple’s use of its voice-activated A.I., Siri, which is enabled across its spectrum of smart products, including its iPhones and Apple Watches.

First introduced in 2011, Siri fields spoken voice queries, allowing users to interact with Apple’s platforms to answer questions and obtain recommendations in a conversational fashion.

Before using Siri, users are instructed to create a “User Profile” by repeating a set of five phrases, essentially to allow Siri to record a user’s voice and learn to recognize it.

According to the complaint, Siri “also records and analyzes the user’s first 40 requests in the same way and stores the resulting data.”

The complaint said this means Apple, through Siri, creates and stores a “voiceprint” for each user, allowing Apple, through Siri, to identify each user.

However, the lawsuit accuses Apple of creating these voiceprints in violation of an Illinois privacy law. The lawsuit asserts the law, known as the Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA), requires companies, like Apple, to obtain written authorization from users before creating and storing biometric identifiers, like voiceprints. The lawsuit said Apple has not done so, and also has not notified users of its policies for storing, sharing and ultimately destroying the voiceprints and other electronically stored biometric data.

The lawsuit seeks damages of $1,000-$5,000 per violation, as spelled out in the BIPA law.

Under the current version of the BIPA law, amended in 2025, Illinois lawmakers have clarified the law should be interpreted to define individual violations as the first time a person’s biometric identifier is scanned, or, in this case, recorded.

However, before that change, the Illinois Supreme Court had ruled the law should be read to allow plaintiffs to collect $1,000 or $5,000 per scan.

To this point, courts have not yet delivered a final ruling on whether the change to the law should apply to lawsuits filed before the law was changed.

So, it is unclear how much money could be at stake in the case against Apple over the alleged Siri “voiceprint” recordings. When multiplied across millions of potential class members, depending on how the law is interpreted in the case, damages could run from the billions up to the hundreds of billions of dollars in potential damages, were the case to proceed to trial and result in a verdict in favor of plaintiffs.

While the lawsuit was the first to target Apple’s use of Siri under BIPA, it is just one of several such class actions plaintiffs’ lawyers have used to target big tech companies, including other companies that have deployed other similar voice assistant artificial intelligences.

Google, for instance, recently agreed to pay $68 million to settle claims that it improperly recorded people’s voices as they interacted with their Google Assistant A.I. installed on Google Home smart speakers and other devices.

Similar lawsuits have been filed against Amazon over its voice-activated Alexa A.I., among others.

In Cook County court, Apple has failed to dismiss the lawsuit against it over the alleged Siri recordings.

Now, Judge Mullen said the company also cannot stop the case from proceeding as a class action.

Apple had attempted to defeat class certification by asserting the ways people interacted with Siri were too different to allow their cases to proceed as if they were the same. Apple had also argued it has not tracked which Apple device users activated and interacted with Siri.

Mullen, however, rejected those arguments, saying he believed later proceedings and investigation could determine whether particular customers were Siri users eligible to potentially collect a share of the payout.

He further said it would be enough for plaintiffs to show Apple had used so-called “feature vectors” to record and log users’ “voiceprints,” as he noted a “uniformity” in the way Apple processes “raw audio” obtained from people interacting with Siri.

The judge certified a class including all Apple device users in Illinois who interacted with Siri since 2014.

Plaintiffs’ attorneys have estimated this could include as many as 3 million people.

The judge also appointed attorneys David Golub and Jennifer Sclar, of Silver Golub & Teitell; Kevin Forde and Brian O’Meara, of Forde & O’Meara; and Zachary Freeman and Rachel Simon, of Miller Shakman Levine & Feldman to serve as class counsel in the case.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

WATCH: Clean Slate Act passes Illinois legislature despite opposition

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Illinois House has approved a Senate bill that modifies the Clean Slate Act to seal certain...
IL tax on billionaires’ ‘unrealized gains’ would face stiff constitutional test

IL tax on billionaires’ ‘unrealized gains’ would face stiff constitutional test

By Jonathan BilykThe Center Square While the provision may not ultimately be included in final legislation that Illinois Democrats ultimately enact to send hundreds of millions of dollars or more...
Illinois trucker: Deadly California crash exposes lawbreaking in trucking industry

Illinois trucker: Deadly California crash exposes lawbreaking in trucking industry

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – An Illinois trucking company owner says the deadly California semi-truck crash involving an illegal immigrant driver...
Massive AI supercomputing systems being built in Illinois, Tennessee

Massive AI supercomputing systems being built in Illinois, Tennessee

By Bethany Blankley | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – While the state of Texas and private investors are advancing artificial intelligence developments in partnership with...
Advocates slam Vance's call for less legal immigration

Advocates slam Vance’s call for less legal immigration

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Legal immigration advocates on Thursday U.S. Vice President JD Vance's call for a reduction in legal immigration Wednesday night while speaking at an event hosted...
Prolonged shutdown hits pain points for some veterans, VA employees

Prolonged shutdown hits pain points for some veterans, VA employees

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square Nearly 37,000 Department of Veterans Affairs employees have been furloughed or are working without pay as the prolonged government shutdown continues and some VA services...
WATCH: Debate around which tax to increase; pension enhancements, energy bills advance

WATCH: Debate around which tax to increase; pension enhancements, energy bills advance

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square Editor Greg Bishop reviews the ongoing...
Trump: China to buy U.S. ag products, oil and gas, export rare earth minerals

Trump: China to buy U.S. ag products, oil and gas, export rare earth minerals

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump said Thursday that China will resume buying U.S. agricultural products, ease restrictions on rare earth minerals and import oil and natural gas...
Illinois quick hits: Energy omnibus bill advancing; ICE protesters indicted

Illinois quick hits: Energy omnibus bill advancing; ICE protesters indicted

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Energy omnibus bill advancing A small business advocacy organization says the energy omnibus bill passed by the Illinois House last night...
Exclusive: America’s HealthShare launches as alternative to 'broken' healthcare system

Exclusive: America’s HealthShare launches as alternative to ‘broken’ healthcare system

By Tate MillerThe Center Square America’s HealthShare launched Thursday as a free-market, community-based healthcare alternative that allows for affordability and personalized care without funding procedures individuals may morally oppose. America’s...
Senators, pro-life group seek answers on FDA approval of abortion pill

Senators, pro-life group seek answers on FDA approval of abortion pill

By Tom JoyceThe Center Square Two Republican U.S. senators and a national pro-life organization say they want the Trump administration to explain why the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved...
Cartel bounties on ICE agents similar to bounties placed in Texas communities for years

Cartel bounties on ICE agents similar to bounties placed in Texas communities for years

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Over the past month, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers working with federal partners have arrested more than 1,500 violent criminals in Chicago as they...
Trump slices China fentanyl tariff in half following meeting with Xi

Trump slices China fentanyl tariff in half following meeting with Xi

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square President Donald Trump feels confident the flow of fentanyl from China will be curbed following a “great meeting” with Chinese President Xi Jinping in South...
Trump orders Department of War to begin testing nuclear weapons

Trump orders Department of War to begin testing nuclear weapons

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump on Wednesday ordered the U.S. Department of War to immediately start testing U.S. nuclear weapons just ahead of a meeting with President...
WATCH: Tax proposals draw questions from Pritzker and GOP state rep

WATCH: Tax proposals draw questions from Pritzker and GOP state rep

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois lawmakers are considering progressive revenue measures in the final hours of the fall veto session, but...