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July 13, 2026View Online | Sign Up | Shop
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“F–k the glasses.” That’s what Lorde said about smart glasses at a music festival in Madrid last week—right before telling people not to buy them (alongside some other very choice words). While the New Zealand singer didn’t call out any company in particular, Ray-Ban happened to be one of the sponsors of the festival, and Jennie from Blackpink, who is an official ambassador for Meta Ray-Bans, was taking the stage right after her. As one Redditor put it, “Now that is meta.”

Also in today’s newsletter:

  • A humanoid robot that’s supposed to look “natural” (but doesn’t).
  • Meta yanks its new AI feature.
  • Find out how much EV drivers in your state are saving.

—Whizy Kim and Saira Mueller

The Download

Apple accuses OpenAI of a hardware heist

OpenAI logo in the bite of the Apple logo

Morning Brew Inc.

TL;DR: In a lawsuit filed last Friday, Apple accused OpenAI of stealing trade secrets for hardware products it spent “hundreds of billions of dollars and decades of effort” developing—and it could (probably much to Apple’s delight) pose a major roadblock to OpenAI’s hardware ambitions.

What happened: Apple’s suit names OpenAI’s current Chief Hardware Officer Tang Tan—formerly Apple’s VP of product design for iPhone and Apple Watch, who was at the company for 24 years—as a key figure in the alleged theft.

Per Apple, Tan directed its employees to bring actual hardware parts to their OpenAI interviews, using these meetings as a “show and tell” to glean what Apple had cooking. The company says over 400 former employees have left for OpenAI, with the lab recently poaching Apple’s smart glasses and VR chief. OpenAI, Tan, technical staffer Chang Liu, and io Products (the hardware company Jony Ive and Tan co-founded, which OpenAI bought last year for around $6.4 billion) are all named defendants, with Apple demanding a jury trial.

Other allegations include:

  • The LOL moment. After realizing he could still access Apple’s file repository, Liu wrote to a former colleague still at Apple, “LOL, I found out I can access the [network storage], so funny.” He then downloaded documents on hardware designs, manufacturing processes, and more.
  • How not to get caught. OpenAI circulated an internal Apple document laying out its offboarding security procedures to new hires, which helped them evade those measures when leaving Apple.
  • Pedal to the metal. OpenAI got a trusted Apple supplier to perform Apple’s proprietary metal-finishing technique by “misleading the partner to believe they had Apple’s permission to do so.”
  • Read the many accusations Apple is making here.

Apple says it reached out to OpenAI in February to discuss this trade theft, but that the company never replied. After the lawsuit was filed, OpenAI said in a statement that it has “no interest in other companies’ trade secrets.”

The two previously partnered to integrate ChatGPT into iPhones, though OpenAI reportedly weighed suing Apple over how it panned out. (Meanwhile, Musk vs. Altman part deux is unfolding on X, with the two trading barbs yet again after Apple’s lawsuit went public.)

Stopping the iPhone killer: An emerging class of AI consumer devices is vying to replace the smartphone—including the ones OpenAI has been working on—and this lawsuit appears to be Apple’s counter. It didn’t mince words in its filing, saying that “OpenAI’s nascent hardware business now rests on the shakiest of foundations, rotten to its core by its illegal reliance on misappropriated trade secrets.”

OpenAI’s messiest “side quest” yet?: Despite vowing this year to focus on its AI models, OpenAI continues to develop hardware products. The suit could throw a wrench in that if the court rules that OpenAI used Apple’s proprietary information to create them. It could also have financial implications and put a strain on recruitment, per Bloomberg.

Bottom line: If even half of Apple’s allegations bear out, we might not see that rumored OpenAI screenless device for a long time—if ever. —WK

Also at Apple…

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The Zeitbyte

This robot can wear Mark Zuckerberg’s face

Mark Zuckerberg's face overlaid on a robot face

Morning Brew Inc., ChipSomodevilla/Getty Images

A Swiss robotics firm swears it’s invented a more “natural” way to interact with machines—by overlaying digital faces of famous world leaders and tech figures (including Mark Zuckerberg) on a robot’s transparent head. The animations blink and emote in a way that’s definitely not spine-chilling and will absolutely put you at ease.

The robot (whose name is Robert) was shown off at the UN AI for Good Global Summit last week. Its creator boasts that Robert can show “human like emotions” while also not being realistic enough to fall into the “uncanny valley trap”—but really, it joins a long list of robot makers not quite cracking the code on building a bot humans actually want to be around. Robert can be booked for trade shows, conferences, and product launches—but not birthday parties, Gizmodo notes, which is probably for the best. —WK

Chaos Brewing Meter: ☕☕☕/5

A stylized image with the words open tabs.
  • New York City is about to make junk fees and subscription traps very expensive for businesses, starting in October—and it could have wider consequences.
  • Could abandoned oil rigs be repurposed as rocket launch sites? The US government hopes so.
  • This stat about how much electricity data centers in Ireland consumed last year is truly wild.
  • Oops… Meta is already backpedaling hard on an AI feature it released last week after huge public outcry.
  • A free Mac app finally tells you which of your USB-C cables are secretly garbage—and using them could affect the battery life of your devices.
  • How much dough are EV drivers in your state saving? The Washington Post has a tool that works out the math for you.
  • This popular trend among tech billionaires around device use continues.
  • As AI solidifies its place in daily workflows, leaders need continuous intelligence that flows from insights and decisions to action without breaking. This Comcast Business report explores five need-to-know continuous intelligence trends. Read on.*

*A message from our sponsor.

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Written by Whizy Kim and Saira Mueller

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