
Apple is in hot water. Again. This time, it’s not about privacy or product delays—it’s about AI hype and broken promises. A new lawsuit from shareholders claims the tech giant exaggerated how far along it was with artificial intelligence in Siri. That, they say, led to massive stock losses.
The case, filed in a San Francisco federal court, names Apple, CEO Tim Cook, CFO Kevan Parekh, and former CFO Luca Maestri. The lead plaintiff, Eric Tucker, says Apple misled investors into thinking the new iPhone 16 would be packed with advanced AI features.

Let’s rewind to June 2024. At the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC), Apple introduced Apple Intelligence, a bold new name meant to showcase how AI would transform Siri. Investors got excited. Media buzzed. But behind the scenes? There wasn’t even a working version of AI-powered Siri ready.
That’s what the lawsuit claims.
The Truth Starts to Leak
It wasn’t long before the shine wore off. On March 7, Apple delayed some Siri upgrades to 2026. That was the first red flag.
Then came the WWDC event on June 9, 2025. Instead of delivering mind-blowing AI features, Apple rolled out aesthetic updates and minor improvements. The market didn’t like it. Analysts were underwhelmed. And investors? Furious.
Apple’s stock has taken a beating—down nearly 25% since its record high in December 2024. That’s a $900 billion loss in market value.
Investors Call It Fraud
The lawsuit accuses Apple of securities fraud, saying it knowingly overstated its AI progress to drive up hype—and stock prices. Shareholders now want damages for what they call “misleading statements and omissions.”
As of now, Apple hasn’t responded to the allegations. But the lawsuit, Tucker v. Apple Inc., is moving forward in the Northern District of California.
What This Means for Apple Fans
If true, this lawsuit could shake confidence in Apple’s product promises. AI is the buzzword every tech company wants to ride—but this case shows what happens when expectation outruns execution.
For now, investors are watching closely. And so are Siri users, still waiting for the promised AI revolution.
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