In May 2025, Apple agreed to a $25 million settlement in the Lopez v. Apple Inc. lawsuit, reigniting global concern over voice data privacy. The plaintiffs alleged that Siri-enabled devices had recorded private conversations without consent, with some users reporting eerily targeted ads shortly after speaking aloud about sensitive topics.
Apple denied wrongdoing and maintains that Siri data was anonymised, not sold or used to build marketing profiles. Nonetheless, the story made headlines and reinforced a growing sense among consumers and regulators that privacy is under pressure — not just at the point of collection, but across the full lifecycle of a device.
For the refurbished tech sector, that shift in perception carries real implications. B2B buyers and public-sector procurement managers are now asking harder questions about how resold devices are handled. Factory resets are no longer enough. Full data erasure, audit-ready reporting, and compliance traceability are fast becoming baseline requirements.
Despite the headlines, Siri recordings are typically processed and stored off-device on Apple servers, not on the handsets themselves. That means Blackbelt360 — or any diagnostic software — cannot erase data stored remotely by Apple or other voice assistant providers.
However, the case has created a heightened awareness of data exposure risks associated with voice-enabled and AI-assisted devices. Refurbished smartphones, tablets, and laptops — particularly those used in corporate, education, or healthcare settings — now come under greater scrutiny.
Procurement professionals are increasingly demanding:
Certified proof of complete local data erasure
Confirmation that logs, usage histories, and app permissions have been cleared
Chain-of-custody traceability throughout the refurbishment process
The question is no longer just, “Has this device been wiped?” but, “Can you prove it meets the highest data privacy standards?”
Smart devices are getting smarter — and so is the data they carry. AI models, behavioural prediction logs, background permissions, and diagnostic metadata can all linger on a device if not properly erased. As a result, refurbishers, retailers and ITAD firms must now meet higher expectations when reselling Apple, Android, or Windows devices.
This new reality is redefining what it means to be secure and compliant in refurbishment. Businesses that can’t produce consistent, independent certification risk losing bids, breaching customer trust, or violating emerging privacy laws.
Blackbelt360’s PC Wipe & Diagnostics platform helps resellers, wholesalers, 3PLs and ITAD firms ensure:
Certified Data Erasure: Compliant with GDPR, CPRA, and global privacy standards
Device-Level Diagnostics: Scanning for anomalies that may indicate residual data risk
Wipe Reports: Branded, export-ready certificates that demonstrate compliance
Inventory Traceability: Chain-of-custody features that track every unit from intake to resale
By supporting privacy-first refurbishment, Blackbelt360 helps B2B partners stay competitive in a market where trust is everything.
The Siri settlement was not about refurbished tech — but it sent a loud signal across the industry. In 2025, privacy isn’t just a consumer concern. It’s a supply chain responsibility. Refurbishers must build data protection into every step of the device lifecycle.
That’s where Blackbelt360 comes in. Our platform empowers B2B businesses to meet modern expectations, win new contracts, and operate with confidence.
Request a demo today to see how Blackbelt360 enables compliance and trust across every refurbished device. Request a demo
To explore how we meet international data privacy standards, visit our Compliance & Accreditation Hub.