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I see Apple skipping the AI hellfire, but shaping Siri as the most flexible assistant

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iPhone with Active Siri
Rachit Agarwal / Digital Trends

When Apple introduced Siri back in 2011, the world freaked out. A personal assistant on a phone with conversational chops elicited an audible gasp from the audience, and plenty of fear. “That it’s a sinister, potentially alien artificial intelligence that’s bound to kill us all,” CNN’s coverage surmised. It was a one-of-a-kind advancement, something Apple was delivering consistently back then.

And then it fell off. Now, Siri has a reputation for being, well… not exactly the sharpest voice assistant, especially in a pool of next-gen generative AI assistants such as Claude, Gemini, and ChatGPT. Anyone who’s tried asking it a tricky question knows exactly what I mean — it’s a drag to talk with Siri, and more importantly, get work done. But things are starting to shake up. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, a prolific all-things-Apple eavesdropper, shared yesterday that Siri might soon open its doors to third-party AI tools in a major iOS update. That’s right! Apple’s walled garden could finally be cracking.

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If you think about it, this is wild. Siri is moving from a closed, self-contained assistant into a flexible AI hub capable of talking to competing technologies. Imagine an Apple assistant that’s no longer boxed in, one that can adapt, learn, and play nice with a whole ecosystem of AI brains. Honestly, I’m still trying to wrap my head around the fact that Siri could soon rank among the most versatile assistants out there, and maybe, finally, stop making us roll our eyes.

If you can’t build it, open the gates for a lease

From iPhones to MacBooks, the way you can pick up right where you left off on one device and seamlessly continue on another? It’s awesome. I don’t mind being in Apple’s curated bubble. It works, and it works well. But whispers of change are in the air. Apple appears to be loosening the reins, hinting at a future where Siri could finally stretch beyond the garden walls.

AirDrop now works with Android phones. Chinese labels are getting the Apple Watch to work with their smartphones. Open-source mad lads are linking the AirPods beyond Apple hardware. I could even remotely access my Mac on an Oppo foldable phone. Siri could be next. Instead of being confined to Apple’s fumbling in-house AI foundations, Siri taps into smarter third-party AI heavy-hitters like ChatGPT, Google Gemini, or Claude.

ChatGPT is pretty great at chats, serving as a knowledge bank, research, and even a few autonomous chores connected to external services, like ordering some chow from GrubHub. Gemini digs deep within Android, and with Google’s bread-and-butter workspace tools such as Gmail, Drive, and even third-party apps. It’s also pretty darn good at videos, images, and shines within NotebookLM.

Microsoft’s Copilot and Anthropic’s Claude dig into the Office 365 with seriously impressive tricks. Siri can barely scratch the surface in its current shape. But instead of racing to catch up — which it has stumbled at, so far — Siri can just borrow the brain of its rivals. The implications are tantalizing. Apple keeps the elegance of its ecosystem while giving Siri the freedom to roam the wider AI universe. It is like inviting a rebel into a luxury mansion, and suddenly the mansion feels a lot bigger.

Continues to stay in control

Even as Apple begins to loosen the gates of its famously walled garden, don’t read that as it giving up control. This is still very much Apple’s world, just with a slightly wider guest list. Every integration will likely be carefully reviewed, filtered, and approved. In classic Apple fashion, control doesn’t go away — it simply becomes more refined.

The company will choose which AI services to let in, ensuring they fit neatly into its ecosystem. It feels more like an invite-only gathering where Apple still decides the next step. And then there’s privacy. Opening the door doesn’t mean lowering the guard. Any third-party AI that wants in will have to follow Apple’s strict privacy rules.

So yes, the garden may feel a little more open now, but Apple is still the one holding the keys and deciding exactly how far anyone gets to go. One of the best examples is Apple’s focus on on-device AI tasks and Private Cloud Compute. Think of it as an AI server, but with Apple’s strict privacy and security protocols in place. A third-party won’t see your media sent for AI editing, and your interactions won’t be seeded to sellers for personalized apps.

How I see it

With WWDC 2026 just around the corner, this is where things could start getting very real. If Apple chooses to flip the switch, we might finally see these long-rumored changes come to fruition. But let’s not get carried away, this is still Apple we’re talking about. It doesn’t compromise on the pillars it loves to remind us about: privacy, security, and a tightly controlled user experience.

Yes, Siri opening up to third-party AI sounds like a big shift, and it is. But Apple isn’t throwing the doors open and hoping for the best. There will be rules, boundaries, and a very clear sense of who gets in and how far they can go.

For you, this could translate into sharper responses and an assistant who actually feels intelligent. For Apple, though, this is a much bigger play. It’s a calculated bet that owning the experience, the interface, the way you interact with your device, matters far more than owning the intelligence powering it behind the scenes. 

Shimul Sood
Shimul is a contributor at Digital Trends, with over five years of experience in the tech space.
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