Contrary to the narrative that Apple is wisely waiting out the AI hype, reporter Mark Gurman asserts their AI strategy has been a "disaster." He claims the tech giant was "completely caught off guard" by ChatGPT and its anti-chatbot stance was a major mistake, revealing a significant strategic miss, not a deliberate, patient approach.

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According to reporter Mark Gurman, the Siri brand has suffered so much damage over 15 years that a technology upgrade alone might not be enough. He questions whether the negative perception is "insurmountable" and suggests that if the new version is truly excellent, Apple may "have to change the name" to signal a genuine break from its unreliable past.

Bill Gurley argues that a sophisticated defensive move for giants like Amazon or Apple would be to collaboratively support a powerful open-source AI model. This counterintuitive strategy prevents a single competitor (like Microsoft/OpenAI) from gaining an insurmountable proprietary advantage that threatens their core businesses.

Apple isn't trying to build the next frontier AI model. Instead, their strategy is to become the primary distribution channel by compressing and running competitors' state-of-the-art models directly on devices. This play leverages their hardware ecosystem to offer superior privacy and performance.

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's historic commitment to user privacy prevented it from using the vast data pools competitors leveraged for AI. This created a technical disadvantage, forcing Apple to use its marketing prowess ('lipstick') to mask a technologically inferior AI product ('the pig').

In a major strategic move, Apple is white-labeling Google's Gemini model to power the upcoming, revamped Siri. Apple will pay Google for this underlying technology, a tacit admission that its in-house models are not yet competitive. This partnership aims to fix Siri's long-standing performance issues without publicly advertising its reliance on a competitor.

OpenAI isn't just hiring talent; it's systematically poaching senior people from nearly every relevant Apple hardware department—camera, silicon, industrial design, manufacturing. This broad talent acquisition signals a serious, comprehensive strategy to build a fully integrated consumer device to rival Apple's own ecosystem.

OpenAI's platform strategy, which centralizes app distribution through ChatGPT, mirrors Apple's iOS model. This creates a 'walled garden' that could follow Cory Doctorow's 'inshittification' pattern: initially benefiting users, then locking them in, and finally exploiting them once they cannot easily leave the ecosystem.

While critics say Apple "missed AI," its strategy of partnering with Google for Gemini is a masterstroke. Apple avoids billions in CapEx, sidesteps brand-damaging AI controversies, and maintains control over the lucrative user interface, positioning itself to win the "agent of commerce" war.

By licensing Google's Gemini for Siri, Apple is strategically avoiding the capital-intensive foundation model war. This allows them to focus resources on their core strength: silicon and on-device AI. The long-term vision is a future where Apple dominates the "edge," interoperating with cloud AIs.