Apple and OpenAI Seek Dismissal of Elon Musk’s xAI Lawsuit Over ChatGPT Deal


Published: October 1, 2025
Background: Tech Titans Collide Over Generative AI Access
Apple’s recent deal to bring OpenAI’s ChatGPT into its iPhone, iPad, and Mac operating systems has sparked fierce resistance from xAI, a company founded by billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk. Musk’s legal challenge, filed in August 2025, accuses Apple and OpenAI of stifling competition in the booming generative AI sector by monopolizing access to core markets through what xAI perceived as an “exclusive” partnership. The integration, announced in June 2024 at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC), makes ChatGPT available as a built-in option across Apple’s key devices, enhancing features like Siri and system-wide text assistance for hundreds of millions of users.
Musk’s Allegations: Monopoly and Market Exclusion
According to xAI’s lawsuit, the Apple–OpenAI arrangement unfairly disadvantages rivals, including Musk’s own Grok chatbot and the X social platform (formerly Twitter). The complaint alleges that by favoring ChatGPT integration directly into its devices, Apple has little incentive to promote alternatives such as the Grok app on the App Store, effectively reducing competition and consumer choice.
“Apple and OpenAI have locked up markets to maintain their monopolies and prevent innovators like X and xAI from competing,” states the lawsuit, which is seeking billions of dollars in damages and, potentially, injunctive relief that could impact how generative AI offerings are integrated with mainstream consumer platforms.
Apple and OpenAI Fire Back
In separate motions filed on Tuesday, Apple and OpenAI urged a U.S. judge to dismiss xAI’s claims. Apple’s attorneys were unequivocal: “Apple and OpenAI’s agreement is expressly not exclusive, and it is public and widely known that Apple intends to partner with other generative AI chatbots.” Indeed, since announcing the ChatGPT rollout, Apple executives have indicated openness to integrating AI solutions from other leading firms such as Google (Gemini), Anthropic (Claude), and even open-source models in the near future. This multi-partner approach, Apple contends, refutes allegations of exclusionary conduct.
OpenAI, echoing Apple’s stance, accused Musk of engaging in “a campaign of lawfare” intended to damage the company’s credibility and distract from its market leadership. OpenAI’s legal counsel argued that xAI “has not alleged any non-speculative harm rising directly out of ChatGPT’s integration as an option for certain features on certain iPhones.” They further said that the harms claimed do not meet the threshold for antitrust action under U.S. law.
Industry Context: The Generative AI Arms Race
The dispute comes amid accelerating global investment in generative AI—a market projected by McKinsey to reach $1.3 trillion annually by 2030. Apple’s move to integrate ChatGPT is widely seen as an attempt to keep pace with rivals Google (Gemini integration in Android), Microsoft (Copilot in Windows), and Amazon (Alexa with generative AI), all vying to embed advanced AI into their core ecosystems.
For OpenAI, the Apple deal is a milestone. ChatGPT already boasts over 180 million monthly users as of mid-2025, and direct integration puts it in front of more than 1.5 billion active Apple devices worldwide. According to recent earnings reports, OpenAI’s revenue has soared, with an estimated $3.4 billion in 2024, up from under $700 million just two years prior.
Conversely, xAI’s Grok—a large language model optimized for real-time information and irreverent wit—has gained traction, especially among users on Musk’s X platform. Yet, it struggles to match ChatGPT’s reach and developer ecosystem, reinforcing the critical importance of platform access in today’s AI market.
Regulatory and Legal Implications
This dispute amplifies regulatory scrutiny already facing Big Tech. Antitrust authorities in the U.S., EU, and U.K. are investigating the market power of major AI players. The U.S. Department of Justice and FTC launched joint inquiries into AI partnerships and cloud concentration in early 2024. Lawmakers are particularly focused on ensuring that big technology firms cannot entrench monopolies by controlling access to pivotal technologies such as generative AI. Last September, the European Commission began probing Microsoft’s close relationship with OpenAI, raising questions relevant to Apple’s latest partnership as well.
Additionally, Musk is pursuing a separate lawsuit against OpenAI and CEO Sam Altman over the company’s transformation from a non-profit (as Musk co-founded it in 2015) to a for-profit model, arguing a breach of its original mission. Altman and OpenAI maintain that the nonprofit-to-capped-profit structure is essential to support massive research investments.
Apple’s AI Strategy: Beyond OpenAI
Against this legal backdrop, Apple appears keen to avoid exclusivity. At WWDC 2025, Apple SVP of Software Engineering, Craig Federighi, said, “Our users deserve choice and privacy. While ChatGPT is our first partner for generative AI, we’re actively working to bring more models to Apple devices.” Industry analysts believe Apple seeks to negotiate additional deals with Google, Anthropic, and others to bolster consumer trust and regulatory goodwill. Notably, Apple has also been investing in its in-house AI models, known as “Apple Intelligence,” emphasizing on-device processing and privacy.
Consumer advocates have largely welcomed Apple’s non-exclusive posture but urge greater transparency regarding data handling and competition. Early developer feedback on iOS 19 and macOS 15 betas suggest that users can choose between ChatGPT and, eventually, other AI models for tasks like text generation and smart search.
What Comes Next?
The California federal judge overseeing xAI’s lawsuit could rule on the motions to dismiss by the end of 2025. Legal experts expect the case to test the boundaries of antitrust law as applied to AI platforms, with potentially far-reaching implications for market access and consumer choice in tech’s next frontier.
For now, Apple, OpenAI, and rivals await the court’s decision, as the battle to dominate the fast-evolving world of AI assistants intensifies.

