In a joint status report, attorneys for Apple and Michael Ramacciotti updated the court on the latest developments in the trade secrets lawsuit over the leak of iOS 26 design details. Here’s what’s new with the case. Last February, Apple and Ramacciotti sent a joint status report to the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California informing Judge James Donato that they had continued exchanging limited discovery as Apple worked to determine the full scope of what Ramacciotti had been able to gather by accessing the iPhone of a former engineer. At the time, they also informed the court that they anticipated “filing a further update with the Court on April 13, 2026.” That happened yesterday, with the update bringing fresh information on the latest developments in the case. When it comes to Ramacciotti, the parties informed the court that they “have continued to advance this case through limited discovery. Apple has forensically reviewed an additional device Mr. Ramacciotti provided to Apple.” The document also informs the court that “Mr. Ramacciotti has agreed to supplement his interrogatory responses and offered to sit for a As for Jon Prosser, things seem less straightforward. Last October, the court accepted Apple’s request to enter a default judgment against him after he missed the deadline to answer the complaint, effectively forfeiting his right to formally contest the allegations in the lawsuit. Back then, Prosser said that he had “been in active communications with Apple since the beginning stages of this case”, adding that “he notion that I’m ignoring the case is incorrect.” In the February joint status report, Apple confirmed that despite the court entering a default judgment against Prosser, he had “acknowledged receipt of the document and deposition subpoenas, and Apple working with him to coordinate a date for his deposition.” In the new joint status report, Apple says:.