July 18, 2026

Major League Baseball Moves to Block Artificial Intelligence Tools on Dugout Tablets

NEW YORK — Major League Baseball is restricting iPad usage in dugouts to prevent the tablets from running artificial intelligence to help make decisions.

The tablets have access to video and league-provided data, and also included a custom tab where teams could access other programs. MLB made the custom tabs inaccessible to teams starting Wednesday night.

"In many cases, the custom tab had expanded the use of the dugout iPads beyond their originally intended purpose to include recommendations regarding substitutions, pitch calling, and other in-game decisions traditionally made by players and coaches," MLB executive vice president of baseball operations Morgan Sword wrote in a June 11 memo to general managers, assistant GMs and video coordinators.

The memo, first reported by The Athletic, was obtained by The Associated Press.

A review by the competition committee found clubs had been compliant with the regulations.

"Instituting this prohibition beginning with the second half of the season is intended to provide clubs that have relied on the custom tab with appropriate lead-time to make any necessary adjustments," Sword wrote.

MLB started a pilot program allowing use of iPads in dugouts with restrictions late in the 2015 season and expanded their use in 2016 under a deal with Apple. Video was eliminated in the 2020 COVID season following the Houston Astros' sign-stealing scandal, then returned in 2021.

Major League Baseball has moved to curtail how teams deploy iPads in dugouts, specifically targeting the use of artificial intelligence systems that assist with in-game strategic decisions. The league took action Wednesday night by disabling custom software tabs that had previously allowed clubs to access programs beyond the devices’ original scope.

Morgan Sword, MLB’s executive vice president for baseball operations, outlined the reasoning in a memo sent to team executives on June 11. He noted that the custom tabs had enabled teams to generate suggestions on matters including player substitutions, pitch selection, and other tactical choices typically reserved for managers and players.

The memo, which The Associated Press obtained after The Athletic initially reported its contents, emphasized that a review by the competition committee had found teams were operating within established rules. However, league leadership determined that the practical application had drifted significantly from the tablets’ intended function.

Sword indicated the June timing would give franchises sufficient opportunity to adapt their operations before the second half of the season begins. He framed the prohibition as a way to ensure fair adjustment rather than an immediate enforcement action.

MLB introduced iPad usage in dugouts as a pilot program late in the 2015 season and formalized the practice in 2016 through a partnership with Apple. The league temporarily suspended video access during the 2020 season in response to the Houston Astros’ sign-stealing investigation, before reinstating it the following year.