San Francisco: OpenAI has taken down promotional content related to its recent $6.4 billion partnership with Sir Jony Ive’s hardware startup, io, following a trademark complaint from a separate company named iyO, which develops AI-powered earbuds.
The removed materials included a high-profile video featuring Jony Ive, the renowned former Apple designer responsible for iconic products like the iPhone, iPod, Apple Watch, MacBook Air, and AirPods, and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. In the video, which can still be viewed on YouTube, the two discussed their ambitions for the venture and the vision behind their collaboration.
An OpenAI spokesperson confirmed that the promotional page announcing the deal had been taken offline due to a court order triggered by iyO’s trademark complaint.
“This page is temporarily down due to a court order following a trademark complaint from iyO about our use of the name ‘io’. We don’t agree with the complaint and are reviewing our options,” the spokesperson said. OpenAI emphasized that the dispute does not impact the actual deal with Ive’s company, which is still moving forward.
Jony Ive left Apple in 2019 after a 27-year tenure during which he shaped many of the company’s most influential product designs.

In the promotional video, he described the new partnership with OpenAI as the natural progression of his life’s work, and stated that, “I have a growing sense that everything I have learned over the last 30 years has led me to this place, to this moment.”
Altman, expressing enthusiasm about the device under development, said he had already tried a prototype and called it: ‘the coolest piece of technology that the world will have ever seen.’
Though specific details of the project remain limited, reports indicate that the product will be AI-enabled, unobtrusive, and designed to be aware of the user’s surroundings and lifestyle. It is expected to complement devices like the MacBook Pro and iPhone, serving as a smart assistant that resides on a user’s desk. The final product is anticipated to debut next year.
While Jony Ive has previously expressed concerns about the unintended consequences of smartphones on society, Sam Altman clarified that the new device is not intended to replace smartphones.
Despite the temporary removal of content and legal friction, the collaboration between Ive and OpenAI represents a significant intersection of AI innovation and iconic product design, with major industry implications anticipated in the coming year.

