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The iPhone 18 Pro camera story Apple wanted to tell—and the Halide lawsuit it got

Apple’s quiet talks to buy Halide for the iPhone 18 Pro’s camera app have exploded into a public co‑founder lawsuit, and the details are anything but boring.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Mar 21, 2026, 10:40 AM EDT
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For years, Halide has been the go‑to camera app for iPhone nerds who felt Apple’s default Camera just didn’t try hard enough. Now, that same app is at the center of a messy breakup, failed acquisition talks with Apple, and a lawsuit that reads like a mix of startup drama and Big Tech ambition, all orbiting one thing: how seriously Apple wants the iPhone 18 Pro to be taken as a “real” camera.

According to reporting, Apple held talks in the summer of 2025 to acquire Lux Optics, the small studio behind Halide, Kino, and Spectre—apps that have built a reputation for treating the iPhone like a serious photographic tool rather than a point‑and‑shoot toy. The idea, reportedly, was straightforward: if Apple wants the iPhone 18 Pro to “match professional‑grade cameras” in advanced features, it needs to push its built‑in Camera app far beyond the current casual user baseline, and Lux’s tech and design chops looked like a shortcut to get there.

Those talks didn’t end in a deal. Lux’s leadership apparently believed they could secure a better offer from Apple later, especially after shipping some big new features, so the acquisition never materialized. That decision now looks like the pivot point for everything that followed: no buyout, no neat exit, and instead a fracture inside Lux that has spilled into court filings.

Roughly two months after acquisition discussions fizzled, Apple did what it often does when corporate M&A doesn’t pan out—it looked at the people instead of the company. Reports say Apple began recruiting Lux co‑founder and designer Sebastiaan de With, the public face of Halide and the person many photographers associate with the app’s obsessive interface and image‑quality philosophy. By January 2026, de With had publicly confirmed he was joining Apple’s Human Interface Design team, calling it a chance to work on his “favorite products,” and effectively signaling that one half of Lux’s founding duo was now inside Apple’s walls.

Inside Lux, that timing clearly did not land quietly. Lux’s CEO and co‑founder Ben Sandofsky is said to have fired de With in December 2025, accusing him of financial misconduct before his move to Apple was formally announced. The split has since escalated into a lawsuit filed in California Superior Court in Santa Cruz, with Sandofsky accusing de With of improperly using more than $150,000 in company funds for personal expenses dating back to 2022.

The legal complaint reportedly goes further than expense reports. Sandofsky alleges that de With shared confidential Lux materials and even source code with Apple, a serious claim for a small studio whose entire value proposition is its intellectual property and proprietary imaging tech. That allegation matters because, during the earlier acquisition talks, Apple employees had apparently emphasized Lux’s IP as a core part of the valuation—Apple didn’t just want talent, it wanted the underlying camera engine and design DNA powering Halide.

Apple itself is not named as a defendant in the lawsuit and is not formally accused of wrongdoing. From Apple’s perspective, at least on paper, this looks like a standard high‑profile hire from the app ecosystem, something the company has done repeatedly in areas from design to photography to productivity software. But the optics are tricky: a tech giant that explored buying a startup for its camera technology, walked away, and then hired one of the founders, while the remaining founder now claims that same colleague misused funds and shared company secrets.

De With’s legal team, for its part, has pushed back hard. They argue the lawsuit is meritless and deny that he “used, transferred, or disclosed any Lux intellectual property” in his new role at Apple. Their narrative flips the script: they say de With raised concerns internally about financial irregularities at Lux and requested access to detailed financial records, and that the lawsuit is essentially retaliation designed to deflect scrutiny away from those issues. In other words, each founder is now accusing the other of being the one with the real money problem.

Zooming out, the whole thing highlights how much is riding on the next wave of iPhone camera upgrades. The iPhone 18 Pro is expected to push deeper into the “pro camera” story, with Apple reportedly treating the Camera app as a top priority and aiming to close the gap with dedicated cameras on advanced features rather than just on computational tricks and marketing. For power users, the appeal of apps like Halide has always been about control—manual exposure, RAW capture, thoughtful UI—and Apple appears to want more of that ethos in the stock experience instead of leaving it solely to third‑party apps.

In that context, bringing de With in‑house makes sense strategically. His decade‑long work on Halide, Kino, and other camera tools has been about balancing serious photographic control with a clean, approachable interface, which aligns perfectly with Apple’s own design ambitions. If Apple is serious about making the iPhone 18 Pro feel less like a phone with a good camera and more like a camera that happens to be a phone, it needs people who’ve already been designing for that mindset.

What happens to Lux and Halide next is the big open question for photographers and loyal users. A drawn‑out legal fight between co‑founders can slow product development, spook potential buyers, and make it harder to chart a clear roadmap, just as the broader market shifts to new hardware like the iPhone 18 generation. At the same time, the fact that Apple considered acquiring Lux at all is a back‑handed compliment: it shows just how much influence a small, highly focused camera app can have on the company that basically defined smartphone photography for the last decade.

For Apple, the calculation is cold but familiar. If it can hire the key talent, learn from the best third‑party camera design in its ecosystem, and avoid legal entanglements, it gets a head start on making the iPhone 18 Pro’s Camera app feel like an upgrade worthy of “Pro” again. For Lux, everything now hinges on the courts—and on whether the studio can convince users and partners that Halide’s future is about imaging innovation, not just internal drama.


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