Apple grapples with AI leadership amid Siri’s struggles and GenAI push

Every spring, Apple convenes its top 100 executives in an offsite meeting to chart the company’s strategic direction. The 2025 meeting was focused on a critical issue—Siri, Apple’s voice assistant, and its lagging performance in the rapidly advancing world of artificial intelligence (AI). Unlike many of its tech rivals, Apple has been slow to build out AI-focused data centers, but recent moves suggest the company is finally positioning itself to compete in the generative AI (GenAI) space.

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OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic unveil competing proposals to shape Trump’s AI Action Plan

With the White House soliciting industry input for its “Artificial Intelligence Action Plan” until March 15, OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic have unveiled detailed proposals to shape US AI policy. These firms, identified by 01.AI CEO Kai-Fu Lee as future AI market leaders, emphasize the need to balance innovation, national security, and global competitiveness.

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EU-Taiwan seminar explores GenAI’s copyright challenges and licensing solutions ahead of 2025 regulations

In November 2022, ChatGPT’s launch marked the beginning of a global surge in generative AI (GenAI) development. However, since then, several GenAI companies have faced lawsuits, and global rights organizations such as CISAC, IFPI, and MPA have ramped up efforts to lobby governments against establishing “fair use” provisions for GenAI.

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SEMI Country excerpt 4: China, BYD, and the battle for EV supremacy

China’s EV industry is now building on the past glories of its automotive sector. The much-criticized issue of “overcapacity” seems to be a perpetual non-concern. Outdated, low-quality EVs are sent to the scrapyard during market transitions. China’s system naturally eliminates laggards that fail to keep pace. The Chinese assure the world there is no need to worry unnecessarily, emphasizing that they possess greater resilience and flexibility than other nations to tolerate failures. Even if only three EV manufacturers remain profitable, the Chinese will not falter.

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