Apple has secured access to the talent and intellectual property of the avatar startup Animato. The company is behind, among other things, Call Annie, a now-discontinued app for AI-powered language lessons via video chat. The deal is documented in the EU Acquisitions Database and is the latest in a series of similar Apple acquisitions.
A new entry in the European Commission's acquisitions database under the Digital Markets Act reveals that Apple has struck a deal with Animato. The startup develops software for virtual avatars in video chats and tutoring applications – an area that directly connects to the Persona feature of Apple Vision Pro for FaceTime and conference apps, while simultaneously expanding Apple Intelligence in a previously underserved direction. Instead of a traditional buyout, Apple has again opted for the acqui-hire model: hiring rights for selected employees, a non-exclusive license for the intellectual property, and the acquisition of patent applications. Apple has used this same structure several times recently, establishing a clear strategy for acquiring external AI and avatar expertise without resorting to formal outright acquisitions.
What Animato has developed
Animato is best known in the tech scene for Call Annie – an app that enabled video chats with AI-powered language tutors. Users could learn languages in a natural conversational setting with an AI avatar, instead of relying on text-based apps or pre-made lessons. While the app has since been discontinued, the underlying technology remains valuable. Animato's software generates virtual avatars that react to spoken language in real time, mimic facial expressions, and create a believable conversational environment.
This technology is interesting for Apple for two reasons. First, it aligns with the further development of the Persona feature in visionOS, which allows Vision Pro users to present themselves as a digital avatar in FaceTime and other communication apps. Second, it opens up possibilities for Apple Intelligence-based applications where an animated character guides the user through complex content - for example, in educational or tutorial contexts.
The Acqui-Hire structure in detail
The DMA filing details exactly what Apple is receiving: the right to offer job opportunities to selected Animato employees, a non-exclusive license to the startup's intellectual property, and the transfer of its patent applications. Apple is not buying the company outright, but rather securing its most important components – talent and technology – without a formal acquisition.
This structure offers two strategic advantages. It avoids the regulatory scrutiny associated with outright acquisitions and reduces integration efforts. Apple integrates key personnel internally, licenses the relevant patents, and can incorporate the technology into existing product teams without having to manage a new subsidiary. For Animato, the deal effectively marks the end of its existence as an independent company – even though no formal acquisition takes place.
Part of a broad series of takeovers
The Animato deal is not an isolated case. Apple has disclosed several similar acqui-hire and licensing agreements in recent quarters – all in the field of AI and related technologies.
- PromptAI – Computer Vision Startup, team and technology were acquired by Apple at the end of 2025.
- WhyLabs – Specialist in monitoring Large Language Models, especially to prevent hallucinations.
- Mayday Labs – AI productivity software for task planning and calendar management.
- TrueMeeting – avatar technology for realistic digital twins, is considered the direct predecessor of the current Animato acquisition in the avatar field.
The pattern is clear. Apple acquires external AI and avatar expertise not through large, high-profile acquisitions, but through a series of small, targeted hires that only become noticeable in products in the following months. The Persona improvements in visionOS 26 are one example that observers have directly linked to TrueMeeting - a similar effect is expected with Animato in one of the upcoming software generations.
Why Apple takes avatars more seriously than you thought
At first glance, Animato appears to be a small language learning project. However, upon closer inspection, the deal fits into a very deliberate strategy. Apple continues to invest in credible digital representations of people – a field that is crucial for both Vision Pro and future Apple intelligence applications. Avatars are the obvious interface for AI-powered conversation, whether in language classes, customer service, or virtual collaboration.
That Apple is acquiring the company that developed Call Annie is noteworthy. Language learning with an AI avatar is one of the applications that intuitively benefits most when the other party appears natural – both in speech and in facial expressions and reactions. This is precisely the task a persona on the Vision Pro must fulfill to be accepted as a communication format.
Apple's shadow work on personas and AI
Animato is the fifth known acquisition in Apple's AI line within just a few quarters. The true value of this acquisition isn't apparent today, but rather in the updates that will arrive on Vision Pro and in Apple Intelligence over the next two to three software generations. Tracing the paths of previous deals reveals a pattern: TrueMeeting contributed to more realistic persona representations, WhyLabs refines the reliability of AI responses, and Animato is likely preparing conversational avatars as a standalone Apple feature. The deal will only become truly visible when it no longer appears as an "acquisition" - but rather as a feature in an iOS or VisionOS update. (Image: Shutterstock / Sergey Nivens)
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