Tim Cook announced that Apple is expanding its integration of generative AI into various products and services and is teaming up with ChatGPT maker OpenAI to boost some of its platforms. The news comes after the company has lagged behind other major tech firms in shifting to AI and has received a lukewarm welcome from other tech players including Elon Musk and Samsung.
Cook spoke at Apple’s annual worldwide developer conference (WWDC) on Monday in Cupertino, California, where he introduced the company’s new AI system, Apple Intelligence. It will be integrated into iPhone, iPad, and Mac and aims to add generative-AI-assisted features “to understand and create language and images, take action across apps, and draw from personal context to simplify and accelerate everyday tasks,” Apple said in a statement.
For example, Apple Intelligence will be able to summarise, proofread or rewrite texts from virtually any app and generate images or emojis. As part of this shift to generative AI, Apple will also integrate ChatGPT technology into its voice assistant bot Siri, AI-powered writing assistant Writing Tools, and new AI image generator Compose.
“AI has to understand you and be grounded in your personal context like your routine, your relationships, your communications and more. It’s beyond artificial intelligence. It’s personal intelligence,” Cook said at the conference.
Apple Intelligence will be available starting this autumn and additional features and language options will be added over the next year.
Elon Musk calls Apple Intelligence ‘creepy spyware’
However, only hours after the announcement, Apple Intelligence has already been criticised by fellow tech players including Elon Musk over privacy and ethical concerns around AI.
After Cook posted about the newly introduced AI system on X, Elon Musk replied to his post writing “Don’t want it. Either stop this creepy spyware or all Apple devices will be banned from the premises of my companies.” The owner of Tesla, SpaceX and X then posted: “It’s patently absurd that Apple isn’t smart enough to make their own AI, yet is somehow capable of ensuring that OpenAI will protect your security & privacy! Apple has no clue what’s actually going on once they hand your data over to OpenAI. They’re selling you down the river.”
It’s not the first time Musk has expressed concerns and disagreement with OpenAI’s ventures. After being part of the firm’s founding team, Musk filed a lawsuit against it in March 2024, claiming the company has abandoned its ethics and safety principles for profit.
During the conference on Monday, Cook addressed privacy concerns and introduced Apple’s secure cloud system “designed specifically for private AI processing”, Private Cloud Compute. This system aims to keep user data private and inaccessible to anyone other than the user.