Apple has withheld features from the EU before. But this is the product Apple staked its entire AI story on after a year of being called "woefully behind." Launching it everywhere except Europe turns a victory lap into something closer to a geopolitical standoff.
The plumbing is where it gets interesting. The model powering the new Siri is Google's Gemini. Under the incoming EU AI Act, someone has to be the "provider" and someone the "deployer." Apple is a DMA-designated gatekeeper. Google is under a separate EU antitrust probe for AI practices. Both companies are now tangled in each other's regulatory exposure through a single product feature. Good luck to those compliance teams.
It cascades from there. Apple's multi-AI Extensions system, the one that opens Siri to third-party models like Claude, only works if base Siri AI is functional. In the EU, it isn't. So the marketplace Apple just spent an entire keynote hyping becomes a Settings menu that leads nowhere.
Both sides are clearly running a pressure game. Apple is banking on consumer frustration to force regulators into concessions, while the EU seems confident Apple won't actually leave hundreds of millions of premium customers with a lesser product indefinitely. Someone miscalculated.
And the EU AI Act's full GPAI enforcement arrives August 2, roughly 55 days out. Even if Apple resolves the DMA dispute tomorrow, they'd be shipping straight into a second regulatory gauntlet.
Two years of delays, and the product finally exists. The regulatory clearance, 55 days before the next enforcement deadline, does not.
Sources: TechRadar WWDC Live, Apple Intelligence

