Categories: News

UK man sues Apple after wife reads ‘deleted’ private chats with sex workers – Firstpost

The UK businessman is suing Apple for 5 million pounds, claiming that the iPhone manufacturer failed to inform users that deleting a message on one device does not remove it from all linked devices. Read more

Did an iPhone just have the last laugh?

While a businessman thought he was having a fun time with sex workers, keeping his wife in the dark, ‘deleted’ messages from his iPhone have now become the reason for his messy divorce.

The businessman in question

The businessman in question, from England, is taking legal action against Apple after his wife discovered messages he had sent to sex workers on their family iMac, despite him believing that they had been permanently deleted from his iPhone.

Advertisement

Discovery of deleted messages

As per a report in The Times, the man, who wishes to remain anonymous, had used iMessage to communicate with sex workers. He thought he had deleted the incriminating messages from his iPhone.

However, due to the synchronisation of devices linked by the same Apple ID, the messages remained accessible on the family’s iMac. This revelation led to his wife filing for divorce.

Claim against Apple

The businessman is suing Apple for 5 million pounds, claiming that the company failed to inform users that deleting a message on one device does not remove it from all linked devices.

“If you are told a message is deleted, you are entitled to believe it’s deleted,” he told the outlet.

Impact on marriage

The discovery of the messages had severe personal repercussions for the man. His wife’s decision to divorce has cost him over 5 million pounds.

He described the experience as “painful and raw,” suggesting that a more rational conversation could have saved his marriage if the messages hadn’t been discovered in such a harsh manner.

“If I had been able to talk to her rationally and she had not had such a brutal realisation of it, I might still be married,” he explained. “It was a very brutal way of finding out [for my wife],” he went on to add.

Legal argument & class-action suit

Advertisement

The man’s lawyer, Simon Walton, in an interaction with The Telegraph revealed that Apple had not been clear with users about the mechanics of message deletion.

“Apple had not been clear with users as to what happens to messages they send and receive and, importantly, delete,” Walton said, arguing, that the iPhone’s notification that “messages have been deleted” is misleading, as the messages can still be found on other linked devices.

He expressed interest in hearing from other Apple customers who have experienced similar issues, aiming to turn this lawsuit into a class-action suit.

Call for clarity

The businessman insists that clearer communication from Apple could have prevented this situation. “In my opinion, it’s all because Apple told me my messages were deleted when they weren’t. If the message had said, ‘These messages are deleted on this device,’ that would have been a clue, or ‘These messages are deleted on this device only,’ that would have been even better,” he stated.

Original Author: Umang Sharma, Umang Sharma | Source: Firstpost

Akshit Behera

Share
Published by
Akshit Behera

Recent Posts

Trump administration’s deal is structured to prevent Intel from selling foundry unit | TechCrunch

The deal allows the U.S. to take more equity in Intel if the company doesn't…

6 months ago

3 Apple Watches are rumored to arrive on September 9 – these are the models to expect

We're expecting two new models alongside the all-new Apple Watch Series 11. | Original Author:…

6 months ago

Fujitsu is teaming with Nvidia to build probably the world’s fastest AI supercomputer ever at 600,000 FP8 Petaflops – so Feyman GPU could well feature

Japan’s FugakuNEXT supercomputer will combine Fujitsu CPUs and Nvidia GPUs to deliver 600EFLOPS AI performance…

6 months ago

Microsoft fires two more employees for participating in Palestine protests on campus

Microsoft has fired two more employees who participated in recent protests against the company’s contracts…

6 months ago

Microsoft launches its first in-house AI models

Microsoft announced its first homegrown AI models on Thursday: MAI-Voice-1 AI and MAI-1-preview. The company…

6 months ago

Life 3.0 – Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence by Max Tegmark

A comprehensive review of Max Tegmark's Life 3.0, exploring the future of artificial intelligence and…

6 months ago