The news: Apple will reportedly launch an AI-enabled web search tool powered by Google’s Gemini, potentially accelerating long-awaited software improvements and helping Apple enter the AI search race, per Bloomberg.
- The “answer engine” would be integrated with Siri and could help Apple compete with OpenAI and Perplexity.
- The feature, internally called World Knowledge Answers, will aggregate information from across the web into AI Overviews-esque summaries. It may eventually be added to Safari and Spotlight.
Zooming out: Apple and Google are competitors in many spaces—voice assistants, browsers, and mobile operating systems, to name a few. However, Apple seems increasingly willing to lean on rivals for software improvements; Apple may also integrate OpenAI’s GPT-5 into its Apple Intelligence suite, per 9to5Mac.
Collaborating with Gemini, especially on new flagship features, suggests Apple may not be trying to displace Google in AI or search. However, this approach undermines Apple’s long-standing strategy of owning its entire tech stack and could erode its strategic independence.
Getting a leg up: Apple’s own models aren’t ready for prime time; slow and limited updates have caused Siri to fall behind its competitors.
- Meanwhile, rivals like Google’s Gemini and Assistant, OpenAI’s ChatGPT, and Microsoft’s Copilot are rapidly integrating powerful models across their platforms.
- By contrast, most of Apple’s AI efforts have been relatively narrow in scope, including Genmoji and Siri Shortcuts.
The opportunity: Integrating Gemini into Safari and Spotlight could transform iOS into a more powerful and capable platform.
- Users could experience smarter, more context-aware voice interactions and better web answers, improving the productivity and convenience of iOS.
- Apple could boost Siri engagement and access new revenue streams by gaining a foothold in the AI search market.
The risks:
- Apple sells itself as a privacy-first, closed ecosystem. Relying on Google, which has a different privacy philosophy, could cause some users to lose trust in that narrative.
- Letting an outside partner power core iOS features could cede search ad revenue opportunities.
- It would also hand Google a win by extending the reach of its AI, currently standard on Android, into the heart of Apple’s platform.
Our take: Apple’s pivot toward external AI partnerships highlights how unready it is to compete head-to-head in foundational AI or search. While a Gemini integration could improve Siri and add powerful search capabilities, it could threaten Apple’s core advantage: total control over the user experience.
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