#AI hardware
cnbc.com · ⭐️ 8/10 · 2026-07-11
Apple filed a lawsuit on July 10, 2026, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California against OpenAI, two former employees, and io Products, accusing them of systematically stealing trade secrets related to product design, manufacturing processes, and supply chain to accelerate OpenAI's consumer hardware business. This lawsuit could set a significant precedent for how AI companies compete with established tech giants in hardware, potentially impacting OpenAI's hardware ambitions and the broader industry's approach to intellectual property protection. Apple alleges former employee Chang Liu downloaded dozens of hardware files after leaving the company, and hardware head Tang Yew Tan sent supplier information to his personal email and encouraged job candidates to bring Apple parts to interviews. Apple also claims over 400 former employees now work at OpenAI.
arstechnica.com · ⭐️ 8/10 · 2026-06-30
South Korea announced a $1 trillion investment plan to expand memory chip production and develop humanoid robots, aiming to boost its semiconductor and AI robotics industries. This massive government investment signals a strategic bet on both commodity memory chips and speculative humanoid robotics, potentially reshaping global supply chains and accelerating the commercialization of humanoid robots. The investment covers memory chips like DRAM and NAND, as well as humanoid robot development, coupling two seemingly disparate sectors. The announcement has drawn mixed reactions, with some questioning the rationale of linking memory chip production with humanoid robots.