> EU can’t and won’t enforce the same rigour for 3rd party cloud AI. Which is the problem for Apple.
Why should they? If the user decides to trust a third party, Apple shouldn't retain veto power for the customer's choice.
This is how macOS treats apps like OpenClaw. It can absolutely work for iOS too.
But how many users are legitimately capable of evaluating how privacy preserving a random Cloud AI provider is?
Let's remember that a tiny company called Meta had a "VPN" they provided for users that just happened to spy on them: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39881962
And that went on for a long while before it was noticed.
Now imagine the same situation but an infinite whack-a-mole of alternative AI providers and just regular folk who will install mobile games from a frozen baby ad...