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Software Technology

Why Apple Delayed Its Biggest Siri Upgrade in Europe (And Who’s Really to Blame)

Jones Alex
Last updated: July 13, 2026 6:55 pm
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Jones Alex
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If you watched the WWDC 2026 keynote, you probably felt a spark of genuine excitement. Apple showcased its most advanced leap forward in a generation: Siri AI, a fundamentally rebuilt, hyper-personalised virtual assistant backed by the core architecture of Apple Intelligence. It promises context-aware screen awareness, text editing, and the ability to execute actions across your apps seamlessly.

Contents
  • The Standoff: Tech Safety vs. Open Markets
    • Apple’s Defense: The Security Threat
    • The EU’s Retort: No Free Passes for Gatekeepers
  • The Crossfire: Who Really Suffers?
  • The Final Verdict: Who is to Blame?

But if you reside anywhere within the European Union, that excitement likely hit a brick wall.

Apple confirmed that when iOS 27 and iPadOS 27 roll out to the public later this year, Siri AI will be entirely missing for EU iPhone and iPad users. Even worse? Apple admits it currently has no timeline for when the feature will ever arrive.

This marks the second major European delay for Apple Intelligence, following the messy standoff that delayed initial features until the release of iOS 18.4 in April 2025. It leaves roughly 450 million consumers stuck in a regulatory vacuum.

So, what went wrong behind closed doors, and who is truly responsible for locking European users out of the AI future?

The Standoff: Tech Safety vs. Open Markets

The friction boils down to a massive collision between Apple’s tightly guarded ecosystem and Brussels’ strict antitrust legislation, specifically the Digital Markets Act (DMA).

Under the DMA, Apple’s mobile operating systems (iOS and iPadOS) are legally designated as “gatekeeper” platforms. This status requires them to provide deep interoperability, meaning Apple must allow third-party companies and developers equal footing to compete with Apple’s built-in applications.

This requirement is exactly where the gears grinded to a halt.

Apple’s Defense: The Security Threat

Apple firmly puts the blame on the European Commission’s “extreme interpretation” of the law. According to Craig Federighi, Apple’s Senior Vice President of Software Engineering, the DMA would force Apple to grant competing AI models nearly unlimited, autonomous access to a user’s device.

In a world of deep on-device integration, an advanced AI needs to read your private messages, access files, check your location, and handle purchases to be useful. Apple argues that handing these capabilities over to third-party virtual assistants without strict system-level gates exposes users to devastating security flaws—such as AI prompt-injection attacks that can hijack private data without user visibility or ongoing consent.

To bridge the gap, Apple spent months pitching solutions to Brussels:

  • The Trusted System Agent: An intermediary software layer designed to let competing AI assistants safely tap into the device’s core system capabilities.
  • An 18-Month Grace Period: A proposal to launch Siri AI in Europe immediately while gradually phasing in the interoperability solutions over a year and a half.

The European Commission rejected both proposals outright.

The EU’s Retort: No Free Passes for Gatekeepers

From the viewpoint of European regulators, Apple is simply playing its favorite card. The Commission pushed back aggressively, with spokesperson Thomas Regnier stating clearly:

“The decision not to roll out Siri AI in the EU is Apple’s and Apple’s only.”

Regulators argue that nothing in the DMA actually forbids Apple from introducing new products. Instead, they claim Apple failed to build a compliant interoperability framework that treats rivals fairly from day one. In the eyes of the EU, granting Apple an 18-month exemption would allow Siri AI to monopolize the iOS ecosystem, choking out competing AI agents before they ever have a chance to compete.

In short: EU law is non-negotiable, and the Commission refuses to hand out exemptions to multi-trillion-dollar corporations.

The Crossfire: Who Really Suffers?

While Apple and Brussels point fingers, the collateral damage is falling on European consumers and local tech ecosystems.

Intriguingly, Siri AI will launch in Europe on macOS 27 and visionOS 27, simply because laptops and headsets aren’t deemed “gatekeeper platforms” under the DMA. Yet, the devices people carry in their pockets every day are left out in the cold.

Furthermore, the delay places European developers at a massive competitive disadvantage. Because Apple has blocked Siri AI testing within the EU on iOS 27, local developers cannot build or optimize apps around the new Apple Intelligence frameworks, lagging far behind their global peers.

Feature StatusInside the EUOutside the EU
Siri AI on macOS 27AvailableAvailable
Siri AI on iOS & iPadOS 27Delayed indefinitelyAvailable at Launch
Developer API TestingBlocked on iOSFully Accessible

The Final Verdict: Who is to Blame?

Assigning blame depends entirely on which side of the digital fence you value more.

If you lean toward user security and uncompromised ecosystem design, the blame lies with Brussels. The European Commission’s rigid, unyielding timeline fails to acknowledge the complex security risks associated with giving third-party AI models deep, autonomous access to private user data.

However, if you favor fair market competition and antitrust enforcement, the responsibility falls squarely on Apple. The tech giant has a long history of using “privacy and security” as an architectural shield to lock out competition and protect its lucrative ecosystem revenues. Rather than building a compliant system that embraces openness from the start, Apple chose to withhold the feature as a leverage play against regulators.

For now, it is a classic corporate-regulatory game of chicken—and European iPhone owners are the ones paying the price.

To better understand the regulatory mechanics behind this conflict, you can watch Apple’s Siri AI Delay in Europe: EU Commission Explains. This video provides the official press briefing from Brussels, clarifying the European Commission’s perspective on why they rejected Apple’s request for an exemption.

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