Now that Apple has confirmed Google Gemini will serve as the foundation of its entire AI stack, you might wonder what happened to Apple’s rumored partnership with OpenAI.
For months, many assumed Apple was on a path toward deeper integration with ChatGPT. Instead, Apple has now locked in Gemini as the core technology behind future Apple Intelligence features. The move effectively closes the door on OpenAI as a foundational partner, and clarifies that such a partnership never truly existed in the first place.
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Was there ever an Apple-OpenAI partnership?
Not in the way it was widely perceived.
At WWDC 2024, Apple announced that Siri could optionally route certain requests to ChatGPT. The distinction mattered. OpenAI was presented as an external service users could choose to use, not as the intelligence powering Siri itself.
Apple stressed that:
- ChatGPT requests required explicit user permission
- OpenAI would not receive user data by default
- Siri’s core reasoning and personalization would remain Apple-controlled
This made ChatGPT an add-on, not a foundation. Siri could consult OpenAI, but it did not run on OpenAI.
Why OpenAI was never a long-term fit
Apple’s latest confirmation reveals what was likely the breaking point.
OpenAI’s models are designed around centralized cloud inference, fast iteration cycles, and a general-purpose chatbot paradigm. Apple, by contrast, is building an AI system meant to sit deeply inside the operating system, spanning apps, on-device context, and private cloud infrastructure.
Apple’s requirements include:
- A hybrid on-device and private cloud architecture
- Deep system-level integration, not a standalone assistant
- Long-term control over behavior, privacy, and deployment
As Apple now confirms, its next-generation Foundation Models depend on Gemini not just for Siri, but for future Apple Intelligence features across the platform. That kind of role requires a partner willing to be invisible, customizable, and infrastructure-first, not brand-forward.
Why Google Gemini won, decisively
The new reporting makes clear that Gemini is not a narrow Siri deal. It is a multi-year agreement that positions Google’s models and cloud technology as the base layer for Apple’s AI going forward.
Apple says its next-generation Foundation Models are based on Gemini. That language signals something deeper than API access. It suggests custom model adaptation, long-term support, and tight coupling with Apple’s Private Cloud Compute infrastructure.
This approach allows Apple to:
- Keep Siri as Siri, not a ChatGPT-branded experience
- Scale intelligence consistently across iOS, iPadOS, and macOS
- Preserve its privacy-first messaging while accelerating capability
What this means for ChatGPT on Apple devices
OpenAI is not necessarily gone, but it is no longer central.
ChatGPT-style integrations may continue to exist as optional tools for writing, summarization, or complex queries. That model aligns with how Apple originally framed the relationship.
But Apple’s AI strategy now has a clear hierarchy:
- Gemini powers the foundation
- Apple Intelligence defines the experience
- Third-party models remain optional enhancements
With Gemini at the core of Apple Foundation Models, Siri is only the most visible change. The real shift is architectural, and it explains why Apple walked away from OpenAI without ever needing to say it did.