Apple is dealing with two big changes this week. First, a shareholder named Eric Tucker has filed a lawsuit against Apple in California. He claims that Apple made false promises about a new, smarter version of Siri, which was shown off at the WWDC 2024 event.
The lawsuit says Apple did not actually have a working version of these advanced Siri features at the time and had no real plan to release them soon. Because of this, the complaint argues that Apple’s stock price was hurt, which also affected shareholders. Apple’s CEO Tim Cook and other top executives are also named in the lawsuit. The case still needs to be approved by a judge before moving forward.
At the same time, Apple has started showing new energy labels for iPhones and iPads sold in the European Union. These labels rate each device on how energy efficient, durable, and repairable it is, using grades from A to G. This change is because of a new EU rule, not something Apple chose to do on its own.
Apple also released a detailed document explaining how it came up with these ratings, saying that the EU’s rules are sometimes unclear, and the results can depend on how companies and labs interpret the tests. These events show Apple facing both legal challenges and new rules about how it sells its products, especially in Europe.