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The new version of Siri has "nerfed" its once-hyped ChatGPT integration. Users must now invoke it with a specific text prompt each time, with no prominent UI. This signals a clear strategic pivot by Apple, distancing itself from OpenAI and suggesting an ideological rift similar to its falling out with Facebook.
Reports of OpenAI considering legal action against Apple over the ChatGPT integration reveal deep strategic tensions. Apple's lackluster integration and exploration of competitors like Google and Anthropic suggest they view OpenAI as a disposable partner, not a cornerstone of their AI ecosystem.
Apple is replacing Siri with a chatbot, a strategic reversal of its long-held view that AI should only be woven into existing features. This acknowledges the market success of conversational interfaces popularized by OpenAI and Google, suggesting a dedicated chat experience is now essential for a modern OS.
Apple is revamping Siri into a full-fledged AI chatbot, a strategic shift away from its previous stance of embedding AI invisibly within apps. This acknowledges the market dominance of the chatbot interface.
By integrating Google's Gemini directly into Siri, Apple poses a significant threat to OpenAI. The move isn't primarily to sell more iPhones, but to commoditize the AI layer and siphon off daily queries from the ChatGPT app. This default, native integration could erode OpenAI's mobile user base without Apple needing to build its own model.
Apple long envisioned AI as a seamless background utility. By developing a dedicated Siri app, it's admitting that the market, shaped by ChatGPT, expects a destination chatbot. This is a significant strategic shift, acknowledging the dominance of a user experience model Apple initially resisted.
OpenAI is considering legal action against Apple for a poor product integration that failed to drive subscriptions. This follows reported frustrations with Microsoft, suggesting a recurring pattern where OpenAI struggles to maintain healthy relationships with its major distribution partners.
Instead of relying on a single partner, Apple's iOS 27 will let users route Siri queries to third-party AI apps like Google Gemini or Anthropic Claude. This transforms Siri from a closed product into an open platform for different AI models.
Apple's partnership with Google for Siri was less about Google's technological superiority and more a strategic move to avoid empowering OpenAI, which is increasingly becoming a direct competitor in consumer hardware like smart glasses and audio devices. Giving OpenAI access to Apple's ecosystem would train a future rival.
The brewing conflict between OpenAI and Apple stems from OpenAI's perception that Apple failed to meaningfully integrate its technology. They believe Apple has hidden the OpenAI features deep within the settings menu, making them difficult for users to find and activate, which ultimately diminishes the value of the partnership for OpenAI.
Apple's choice to partner with Google for its Siri overhaul highlights a strategic decision to avoid a direct hardware competitor like OpenAI. OpenAI's reported hardware ambitions and recent leadership turmoil likely made the more stable, familiar partnership with Google—a historical collaborator—the safer bet for Apple.