Apple may tap Google Gemini for Apple Intelligence AI

5gDedicated

In search of an AI that keeps things private, Apple is reportedly planning to pay Google to provide a kind of white-label version of Google Gemini AI that will run securely on Apple’s own Private Cloud Compute servers.

Weekend reports explained a little about how this is meant to work:

Siri may use an AI web search tool powered by Gemini.

Gemini will provide query and summary capabilities.

This tool will be introduced in March 2026.

Use of the white-label Gemini AI doesn’t mean you will access Google-branded tools or services; the AI will simply be used to partially power Siri’s services.

Apple will market it as Apple tech running on Apple servers. Gemini will be present to support Apple’s wider offer rather than anything else.

AI- as-a-service

The basic premise here seems to be that pending introduction of its own proprietary search tools; Apple will make use of Gemini. Further, because privacy is extremely important to Apple, the company will use a version of Gemini hosted on its own Apple servers. 

This isn’t the first AI partnership Apple has explored. 

It made access to ChatGPT available within Apple Intelligence on day one and now also enables developer use of Anthropic’s Claude AI within Xcode 26. In China, Apple has been reported to be working with Baidu and Alibaba to support Apple Intelligence. It’s not at all impossible the company will find itself required to adopt a tapestry of AI access deals as nations begin to wake up to the strategic challenges of transnational AI provision as evidenced by the growing desire for sovereign cloud services.

Apple, presumably, hopes the desire for private and secure cloud AI services will become the wind beneath the wings of its private and secure approach to delivering such services. After all, even if Google Gemini becomes one of the primary services driving Apple Intelligence, the fact it does so natively on Apple’s own private/secure servers is an advantage for Cupertino. 

In the market

That same drive toward sovereign cloud AI services will also act as an imminent brake on the development of new AI tech empires that demand global access to markets for their business plan to work. That’s not to say tech firms won’t find ways to sidestep that desire, but it will certainly be helpful to have good relationships with hardware suppliers to achieve that kind of share.

In that sense, this new Google/Apple arrangement may feel inevitable. Google will want to give Gemini the best possible shot at ubiquity, while Apple may find itself pondering AI partnerships beyond ChatGPT, given how many of its former designers are now involved in hardware design for OpenAI. 

Industry watchers must wait and see what the real implications of this will be, given that access to the actual raw materials for high-end computational devices is becoming increasingly limited as more firms than ever chase the market for compute chips. OpenAI needs more servers, more than it needs to give people smart bracelets. 

Apple, meanwhile, already has a good ecosystem for its highly capable edge AI platforms. Just ask anyone who has already enjoyed working with Draw Things, Mic Drop, or Topaz Video on a new M5-powered Mac — they will confirm that Apple’s AI PCs are already in active use.

Defeat and victory

While it is true that Apple’s adventures in AI appear to have been frustrating so far when it comes to big-ticket usability features, it does seem to be playing a very shrewd game in how it delivers new Apple Intelligence features and the tradeoff between its traditional ‘not invented here’ approach and partnership. 

We can’t be certain, of course, that it won’t continue to work on creating its own generic AI to match ChatGPT or Gemini, but perhaps it doesn’t have to if it can build a good business with these others.

It may even work in the company’s favor to offer up a limited suite of homemade services while supporting multiple third-party providers, given that regulatory pressure to do so looks inevitable on the current trajectory. After all, if Apple Intelligence matched ChatGPT, would it be accused of market dominance? That’s harder to argue if support for third-party AI services is made available from the get-go, as it already is. 

Reaching for the popcorn

Plus, of course, the existence of increasingly sophisticated AI services will eventually erode the apps market, but that won’t be for some time to come and will likely just see the rate of growth in that market slow, rather than atrophy.

We’ll see how things pan out, but speculation increasingly coalesces around Apple offering up specific services it thinks may be useful to people running on the device, adding some more sophisticated self-hosted cloud services, and opening things up for third-party support for the most complex tasks. 

You can follow me on social media! Join me on BlueSky,  LinkedIn, and Mastodon.ComputerworldRead More