Apple Is Betting on Privacy to Make Its Revamped Siri Stand Out From ChatGPT and Other AI Chatbots
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Apple is preparing to make privacy the centerpiece of its Siri relaunch at the Worldwide Developers Conference in June, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. The company is expected to unveil its first standalone Siri app, powered by Google Gemini, offering users a chatbot experience comparable to ChatGPT but with stricter limitations on how long user data can be stored and used. One reported feature would allow users to automatically delete their Siri conversations after 30 days or one year, similar to how the Messages app currently handles auto-deletion, with the option to keep conversations indefinitely for those who prefer it. Apple executives are expected to frame these privacy controls as a deliberate contrast to how most other AI companies handle user data, positioning Siri as the more trustworthy option in a crowded and fast-moving market.
The relaunch carries significant stakes for Apple, which has fallen noticeably behind competitors in the AI race and is counting on a revamped Siri to reestablish its relevance. However, Gurman raised a pointed question about the privacy narrative: if Google Gemini is handling the underlying intelligence behind Siri's responses, Apple's emphasis on privacy may obscure the fact that a third party is processing some of that data. The tension between Apple's privacy-first branding and its reliance on Google's infrastructure is likely to draw scrutiny once the product is officially announced. For now the strategy appears to be using privacy controls as both a genuine product differentiator and a way to manage expectations around a Siri that may still lag behind ChatGPT and Gemini in raw capability when it debuts.
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Auto-delete after 30 days, Google still processed it though
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Google Gemini processing data while Apple markets privacy controls creating fundamental tension that scrutiny will expose immediately at announcement