Key Takeaways
- US federal court allows Elon Musk’s xAI lawsuit against Apple and OpenAI to proceed
- xAI alleges anti-competitive practices in Apple’s Siri-ChatGPT integration
- Apple and OpenAI deny claims of exclusive partnership
A US federal judge has rejected attempts by Apple and OpenAI to dismiss Elon Musk’s xAI lawsuit, allowing the legal battle over alleged AI market collusion to move forward. Texas District Judge Mark Pittman ruled both companies must present detailed arguments defending their positions in what could become a landmark case for artificial intelligence competition.
The Core Allegations
Elon Musk’s xAI filed the lawsuit in August 2025, accusing Apple and OpenAI of collaborating to strengthen their control over the rapidly expanding AI market. The complaint followed Musk’s criticism that his platforms, X and the Grok chatbot, were excluded from the App Store’s “Must Have” list.
In court documents, xAI claimed Apple fell behind in the AI race and turned to OpenAI to maintain smartphone ecosystem dominance. The case centers on Apple’s deep integration of ChatGPT into Siri, which xAI argues gives OpenAI unfair advantage since Apple hasn’t provided comparable system-level access to other chatbot developers.
Competitive Concerns
While iPhone users can download AI apps like Grok, xAI contends standalone applications cannot compete with Siri’s ChatGPT integration for convenience and system access. The company also accuses Apple of minimizing rival AI products’ App Store visibility and preventing Grok from accessing valuable iPhone user data through denied integration.
Defense Position
Apple and OpenAI responded in a joint filing earlier this month, maintaining the lawsuit is without merit. They stated Apple has no exclusive agreement preventing it from adding other chatbots to Siri in the future. The legal process will now determine whether xAI’s competition concerns have legal standing.






