Jon Prosser on trial: the world's best-known leaker Apple faces court for revealing the secrets of iOS 26
Stolen secrets, a hacked iPhone, and a FaceTime call. Thus was born the biggest legal scandal in the tech world.
The man who revealed some of Apple's best-kept secrets now has to answer in federal court. Jon Prosser, the popular YouTuber of the Front Page Tech channel, is in the eye of the storm after the Cupertino company filed a formal lawsuit against him for leaking confidential information about iOS 26 before its official presentation. And as if that were not enough, Prosser is expected to give a sworn statement in court on June 16, an appointment that promises to be one of the most tense moments of this case.
The plan that ended up in court
It all started in early 2025, when Prosser posted a series of videos on his channels showing what was supposed to be the new iOS 26 design, including the redesigned Camera app and the then-unknown “Liquid Glass” visual language, the most radical transformation of Apple's interface in years. The problem wasn't just publishing the videos. The problem was how he got that information.
According to the lawsuit filed in the Northern District Court of California, Apple accuses Prosser and his alleged accomplice, Michael Ramacciotti, of orchestrating a coordinated scheme to illegally access an iPhone in development that belonged to Ethan Lipnik, an Apple engineer. The accusation is quite specific and, let's be honest, it sounds like a movie: Ramacciotti would have used geolocation tools to know when Lipnik was not at home, accessed the apartment, deciphered the device's code and then made a FaceTime video call with Prosser to show him the secret interface of the operating system.
Prosser, on the other side of that call, would have recorded the screen, and with that material created the renders and models that he later presented publicly as “leaks.” Apple, which discovered all this thanks to an anonymous email from someone who recognized Lipnik's apartment in the video, even has a voice note in which Ramacciotti apologizes to Lipnik and points directly to Prosser as the mastermind behind the plan. Lipnik, by the way, was fired for not properly following internal software protection policies.
The formal accusations and what Apple asks
The demand does not remain in words. Apple formally accuses Prosser and Ramacciotti of misappropriation of trade secrets and violating the United States Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. In addition, the company alleges that the YouTuber benefited financially from all of this, generating advertising revenue on YouTube thanks to the videos that, according to Apple, were based on stolen material.
What Apple is seeking in court is quite ambitious. The company wants a permanent injunction preventing Prosser from publishing any confidential information or trade secrets about the brand in the future, and for him and Ramacciotti to destroy or return any material still in their possession. On top of that, Apple is asking for compensatory and punitive damages, reimbursement of legal fees and, to give more weight to the matter, requested that the case go to a jury trial.
Prosser has not remained silent. On his social networks he responded quickly and firmly, ensuring that Apple's version "does not reflect what happened on my side" and denying that he had conspired to access anyone's phone. He also made it clear that he has evidence to support his version and that his report could be protected by the First Amendment of the US Constitution.
The deposition of June 16, the key moment
The case has had more twists than a suspense series. After the lawsuit in July 2025, Prosser did not formally respond to the accusation within the legal deadline, which caused the court to apply a default judgment to him in October 2025, that is, an automatic resolution against him for not appearing. Apple won liability without Prosser being able to defend himself, but the case remained active to determine damages.
For months, the YouTuber only partially complied with subpoenas to hand over documents, according to court reports from April 2026. Apple even announced that it planned to file a motion in Ohio to force its cooperation. However, an important twist came on June 10, 2026: Apple and Prosser's legal team jointly asked the court to vacate the default judgment, something that Apple itself called “the most efficient way to move forward in the case.”
The agreement is clear. Prosser agreed to turn over all outstanding documents and, as part of the discovery process, will be required to give a sworn statement on June 16, 2026, provided Judge Donato approves the motion. That deposition will be the moment when Apple will be able to ask him directly how much confidential information he really had in his possession, what he did with it and what his true role was in this entire scheme. Prosser's responses that day will be decisive in establishing the amount of damages he may have to pay.
Jon Prosser's case against Apple is not just a fight between a content creator and a multibillion-dollar corporation. It is a battle that is redefining the limits of technology journalism, the ethics of leaks and the real consequences of revealing secrets in the digital age. For better or worse, what happens in that courtroom in the coming days could mark a before and after in how the media and content creators cover big technology companies.
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