Apple finally gave Siri the brain it always needed — but European users will have to wait. At WWDC 2026, Apple unveiled a rebuilt, deeply context-aware Siri AI and the next generation of Apple Intelligence across its new operating systems. The catch: the flagship Siri features won’t ship in the EU initially, a telling sign of the regulatory friction reshaping how Big Tech rolls out AI.
A smarter Siri at last
The assistant got its biggest overhaul ever. Apple’s rebuilt Siri AI has a deep, system-wide understanding of personal context and on-screen awareness — able to act on what you’re looking at and what it knows about you across apps. After years of Siri lagging rivals, Apple is betting that on-device personal context, not just raw model power, is its differentiator in the AI assistant race.
iOS 27 and the full lineup
The software refresh is sweeping. Apple announced iOS 27, iPadOS 27, macOS 27, watchOS 27, visionOS 27 and tvOS 27, alongside next-gen Apple Intelligence features and expanded parental controls. Performance gains include photos loading 70% faster, AirDrop transfers 80% quicker, and improved multitasking — with devices from the iPhone 11 onward eligible for the update.
The Europe problem
The most revealing detail is a gap. Siri AI will not be available in the EU on iOS 27 and iPadOS 27, at least initially — and because the Apple Watch version depends on an iPhone running Siri AI, it won’t reach EU Apple Watches either. Apple has repeatedly cited the bloc’s Digital Markets Act and regulatory requirements as reasons for delaying or withholding features in Europe.
Why the EU keeps missing out
This is becoming a pattern. Apple argues that the DMA’s interoperability and openness mandates create privacy and security complications that force it to delay AI features in Europe while it works out compliance. Critics counter that Apple is using regulation as leverage — letting EU users feel the cost of strict rules. Either way, Europeans increasingly get a second-tier Apple experience, a striking consequence of the regulatory standoff.
Why it matters
The split rollout shows how regulation now shapes product availability, not just business terms. As AI becomes the core of the smartphone experience, a region falling behind on features has real stakes for users and developers. Apple’s WWDC also signals its determination to catch up in AI on its own terms — privacy-first, on-device, and tightly integrated — even as it navigates a fragmenting global rulebook.
The bottom line
WWDC 2026 marked Apple’s most serious AI push yet, headlined by a genuinely smarter Siri and a deeper Apple Intelligence across iOS 27. But the decision to withhold Siri AI from the EU underscores a new reality: regulation increasingly determines who gets the latest technology and when. Apple is betting big on AI — just not everywhere at once.
Photo: MDGovpics / BY via flickr