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Wednesday · June 24, 2026 · Issue No. 905
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Why Apple’s Siri Is Still So Bad In The Age Of AI

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Siri struggles to compete in AI revolution

In an era where artificial intelligence capabilities are exploding at an unprecedented pace, Apple's voice assistant has been noticeably lagging behind competitors. The recent CNBC video analyzing Siri's shortcomings highlights a puzzling contradiction: how can the world's most valuable tech company, with seemingly unlimited resources, fail to keep pace in the AI assistant race? This question becomes even more pressing as competitors like Google, Microsoft, and numerous startups rapidly advance their AI capabilities.

Key insights from the analysis:

  • Historical advantage squandered – Despite being first to market with a mainstream voice assistant in 2011, Apple has allowed competitors to leapfrog Siri's capabilities through more aggressive innovation cycles and development approaches.

  • Structural limitations – Apple's privacy-first approach, while commendable for user protection, has created significant constraints in data collection that hamper Siri's learning capabilities compared to more data-hungry competitors.

  • Engineering and strategic challenges – Internal reorganizations, shifting priorities, and the decentralized development approach for Siri have created a patchwork system rather than a cohesive assistant, limiting its effectiveness.

  • Integration vs. standalone intelligence – Apple has positioned Siri primarily as a feature integrated into its ecosystem rather than developing it as a standalone intelligence platform, limiting its scope and ambition.

The privacy paradox

The most compelling insight from this analysis is Apple's fundamental conundrum: maintaining its privacy-first approach while competing in an AI landscape that thrives on massive data collection. This isn't merely a technical challenge but a philosophical one that cuts to the core of Apple's brand identity.

This matters tremendously as we enter an era where AI capabilities increasingly define product differentiation. Apple's emphasis on processing data on-device rather than in the cloud represents a principled stance, but one that creates significant technical hurdles. While Google and Microsoft can train their models on vast amounts of user data stored in their cloud infrastructures, Apple's commitment to privacy inherently limits the data available for training Siri.

Industry analysts note that this privacy-versus-capability tension represents one of the most significant strategic challenges in consumer technology today. As AI becomes more central to product experiences, Apple must navigate this difficult balance or risk losing its competitive edge in user experience – historically its

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