James Titcomb
When Apple sued OpenAI last week, claiming the company behind ChatGPT had sought to steal its trade secrets, one name was conspicuously absent from the lawsuit.
Sir Jony Ive, the British designer whose collaboration with Steve Jobs led to Appleβs most creative years, was not mentioned in the 41-page document, despite his company, io Products, and co-founder Tang Tan being named as defendants.
Ive has recently been working with OpenAI to develop new products, and Appleβs lawyers appeared to go out of their way not to mention him by name, stating that io was founded by βformer Apple leadersβ.
But the companyβs legal manoeuvres against Iveβs new partners suggest a rift between Britainβs most celebrated designer and the company that made him a household name.
βApple is effectively suing Jony Ive,β said Gene Munster, a longtime follower of the company at Deepwater Asset Management.
βEverything I have learned has led me to this momentβ
Ive, 59, is a part of Apple lore. His multicoloured iMac helped save the company in 1998 before the iPodβs minimalist white design and the single-button iPhone turned it into the worldβs biggest company.
He left the company in 2019, in a carefully choreographed exit designed to minimise concerns from investors.
Ive set up his own design studio, LoveFrom, and said he would continue to work with Apple.
However, confidants at the time said he had become increasingly detached after the Apple Watchβs 2015 release. Tim Cook, Appleβs chief executive, called the claims βabsurdβ.
A three-year contract between Apple and Iveβs studio was not renewed in 2022 and a series of pet projects followed, including designing the Kingβs coronation emblem as well as Ferrariβs first electric vehicle, the β¬550,000 ($900,000) Luce that horrified some Italians when it was unveiled in May.
In 2024 Ive secretly set up io Products, hiring a string of his old Apple colleagues, including Tan, who was the companyβs head of design for the iPhone, and started working with OpenAI.
The relationship was made official the next year when Sam Altman, the boss of OpenAI, announced he was buying the start-up for $US6.4 billion ($9.1 billion), a precursor to the company launching an AI device.
Ive himself did not join the company but said he would be deeply involved. βI have a growing sense that everything I have learned over the last 30 years has led me to this moment,β he said.
The British designer, knighted in 2012, has hinted that his relationship with Apple had gone sour.
βPart of my grumpy belligerence now is Iβm done working with arseholes,β he said earlier this year when unveiling the Luce. βIβm so happy that we can place creative excellence right at the centre of what weβre doing.β
In a veiled dig at Apple, he said his OpenAI work was driven by a feeling that βhumanity deserves betterβ and said that he felt responsible for some of the negative effects of technology, which include smartphone addiction.
There is still no sign of the ChatGPT device, which Altman has said will be βthe coolest piece of technology that the world will have ever seenβ.
But OpenAI is expected to unveil it in the coming months. Signs point to a screen-free, portable, puck-style speaker that can listen to conversations and answer questions.
Although not a direct rival to the iPhone, Apple is set to launch a new high-powered version of Siri alongside its latest phones β putting the two companies in competition.
Apple is also expected to unveil a foldable iPhone it hopes will be the yearβs must-have gadget.
Having the man who once would have designed it promoting something else will rankle with Apple executives, especially if it is designed to disrupt the iPhone.
The ChatGPT device is not expected to go on sale until next year but may well be announced in the autumn, when companies such as Apple seek to hog the limelight.
The two companies have gone from allies to rivals.
Two years ago Apple struck a deal with OpenAI that would mean ChatGPT would handle some Siri answers. It has since chosen to work with Google.
Complicating the picture further, Laurene Powell Jobs, Steve Jobsβ widow, has invested in io Products and is said to be among the first to have seen the OpenAI device.
OpenAI has also hired a slew of Apple employees in the past year.
In its lawsuit, filed on Friday night, Apple alleged that this was part of βa pattern of theft of Appleβs trade secrets by OpenAI employees who were formerly at Appleβ.
It said Tan, one of Iveβs io co-founders, had asked Apple employees in interviews to divulge details of the companyβs secret projects, and that OpenAI had asked candidates to bring Apple prototypes along.
Apple claimed the company had realised that making successful gadgets was harder than anticipated, and as a result had resorted to taking βunlawful shortcutsβ as it is under financial pressure to deliver a trillion-dollar public listing.
The company also said OpenAI had failed to reply when Apple inquired about the claims, forcing it into legal action.
On Tuesday night OpenAI responded, saying there was βno evidence this complaint has meritβ. Documents seen by NBC also cast doubt on claims the company had stonewalled Apple, suggesting communications had actually gone dark after a lawyer representing Apple mixed up the names of two OpenAI employees with the last names βWangβ and βChangβ.
Appleβs lawsuit has been characterised as an attempt to put more employees off leaving. βAt a minimum, this will slow OpenAIβs efforts. At a maximum, it will end their device efforts,β says Munster.
Even if he was not named in Appleβs lawsuit, Ive may well get dragged into the case should it go to trial.
βIt is quite possible that Jony Ive and other founders of io Products will be deposed in this case since they are likely to be identified as having information relevant to Appleβs trade-secret misappropriation claims,β says Elizabeth Rowe, an intellectual property expert at the University of Virginia.
Iveβs 30-year partnership with Apple was one of the worldβs most lucrative collaborations. Their break-up could be similarly explosive.
Telegraph, London
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