Google's leadership betrayed the personal trust and friendship of Apple's leadership in stealing what Steve Jobs believed were Apple's most prized possessions. Steve Jobs famously said "…I will spend every penny of Apple's $40 billion in the bank, to right this wrong. I'm going to destroy Android, because it's a stolen product." Google's co-founders met Steve Jobs and wanted him to become Google's CEO. Already CEO of his own 24 year-old tech company with $8 billion in revenues that had just developed the iconic iPod, Jobs took Larry Page and Sergey Brin under his wing and mentored them. "Jobs was excited by the opportunity to hook up with a business whose activities were entirely complementary to Apple's." The closeness between Apple's and Google's leadership team, Steven Levy wrote: "There was so much overlap that it was almost as if Apple and Google were a single company." In secrecy, Apple started the development of the iPhone in 2004. In August 2005, Google quietly bought the Android start-up, when no one outside of Apple was supposed to know that Apple was working on the iPhone. Eleven months later, in November of 2007, Google showed a video that effectively juxtaposed Google-Android's original pre-iPhone "before" prototype which looked and operated more like a Blackberry button-driven phone, with Google-Android's post-iPhone-launch "after" prototype that heavily-resembled the look-and-feel of the iPhone and incorporated many of Apple's signature touch-screen inventions. He felt "he had been betrayed by the two young men he had been attempting to mentor. He felt the trust between the two companies had been violated. Not only did he believe that Google had performed a bait and switch on him, replacing a non-competing phone with one that was very much in the iPhone mode, but he also felt that Google had stolen Apple's intellectual property. Steve Jobs said, "We can sit by and watch competitors steal our patented inventions, or we can do something about it. We've decided to do something about it. We think competition is healthy, but competitors should create their own original technology, not steal ours. "In August 2012, Apple wins a 1.05b infringement suit against Samsung for copying many distinguishing features of the iPhone and iPad. He uses his intelligence in this process to stop Google, and make them pay for stealing his ideas.