Apple and Jon Prosser’s attorney have asked the court to set aside the default entered against him last October, which may give him another chance to formally respond to the complaint. Here are the details.
A bit of context
Last year, Apple filed a lawsuit against Jon Prosser over the leak of the Liquid Glass visual revamp.
In addition to suing Prosser, Apple also sued Michael Ramacciotti, who, according to court documents, secretly accessed the iPhone of Apple employee Ethan Lipnick and got paid for showing Prosser a version of iOS 26 that was still under development. Lipnick was later fired.
According to court documents, while Ramacciotti cooperated with the lawsuit from the start, Prosser missed several deadlines to respond to Apple’s complaint. Prosser contested this information.









