Apple, Google $20 billion search deal at risk amid rise of AI


Summary

Apple and Google's partnership

Apple and Google currently have an arrangement where Google pays Apple an estimated $20 billion annually to keep being the default search engine on its devices. Now, though, Apple is exploring AI-powered alternatives to traditional search.

AI search

During testimony in the Department of Justice's antitrust trial against Google, Apple's senior vice president of services Eddy Cue said Apple is "actively looking" into AI-powered search alternatives like Perplexity, OpenAI and Anthropic.

Market impact

Google parent company Alphabet's stock dropped more than 7% after Cue's testionomy, erasing nearly $150 billion in market value.


This recording was made using enhanced software.

Summary

Apple and Google's partnership

Apple and Google currently have an arrangement where Google pays Apple an estimated $20 billion annually to keep being the default search engine on its devices. Now, though, Apple is exploring AI-powered alternatives to traditional search.

AI search

During testimony in the Department of Justice's antitrust trial against Google, Apple's senior vice president of services Eddy Cue said Apple is "actively looking" into AI-powered search alternatives like Perplexity, OpenAI and Anthropic.

Market impact

Google parent company Alphabet's stock dropped more than 7% after Cue's testionomy, erasing nearly $150 billion in market value.


Full story

Apple is exploring ways to integrate artificial intelligence into its Safari browser, a move that could threaten its long-standing partnership with Google. The news came from Apple Senior Vice President of Services Eddy Cue during testimony in the Justice Department’s antitrust trial against Google, Bloomberg reported.

The court recently ruled that Google maintained an illegal monopoly in online search and the case has now moved on to figuring out what should be done about it.

Google currently pays Apple an estimated $20 billion annually to remain the default search engine on its devices. This arrangement has been a major driver of search-related advertising revenue for Google’s parent company, Alphabet. Under the deal, when users enter search queries into Safari, Google serves the results and shares ad revenue with Apple — essentially handing Apple billions without requiring any active contribution on its part.

Dynamic may be shifting

However, that relationship may be on the verge of unraveling.

Cue testified that searches through Safari declined in April and indicated that the rise of generative AI tools may be beginning to chip away at Google’s dominance. He said Apple is “actively looking” into AI-powered search alternatives, and named AI search startups Perplexity, OpenAI and Anthropic as potential partners, according to Bloomberg.

Currently, iPhones already offer access to OpenAI’s ChatGPT as a supplement to their own AI product, Apple Intelligence, introduced in iOS 18 — an arrangement that may signal deeper integration to come.

Unbiased. Straight Facts.TM

As part of their search engine deal, Google’s $20 billion payment to Apple represented approximately 5% of Apple’s overall services revenue.

Apple’s efforts to adopt AI have underwhelmed users. The Apple Intelligence rollout’s reported delays in launching an AI-enhanced version of Siri invited more criticism. Cue made clear that the growing dominance of AI in tech is pushing Apple to prioritize its integration more than ever.

Still, some analysts argued AI tools remain too inaccurate to replace traditional search engines.

“Some of the AI we get today isn’t 100% reliable,” Robert Schein, chief investment officer at Blanke Schein Wealth Management, said in an interview with Bloomberg. “If you were to do an AI search, you’d have to double-check other AI platforms just to ensure that what you’re getting is quality and truthful and real-time content.”

Schein still believes in Google’s strong position.

“A company like Google will evolve and take advantage of opportunities, even if it’s a setback,” he said. 

Google has been pouring billions into its own AI search initiatives, including AI-generated summaries that appear above standard search results.

CEO Sundar Pichai announced in April that Google is pursuing a deal to bring its Gemini AI model to future iPhones.

How did markets react?

Alphabet’s stock dropped more than 7% following Cue’s testimony, wiping nearly $150 billion off its market value.

Using Alphabet’s stock ticker, longtime Apple analyst Gene Munster wrote on X that “GOOG is likely going lower because Search is in the very early stages of a seismic change that investors haven’t fully factored into current valuation.

“Among users who are engaging with generative AI daily, they’re using Google far less,” Munster added in another post.

Shares of Alphabet rebounded slightly Thursday, May 8, after Google issued a rare public statement disputing Cue’s claim that Safari search volume had declined.

“We continue to see overall query growth in Search,” Google wrote. “That includes an increase in total queries coming from Apple’s devices and platforms. More generally, as we enhance Search with new features, people are seeing that Google Search is more useful for more of their queries — and they’re accessing it for new things and in new ways, whether from browsers or the Google app, using their voice or Google Lens.”

But the risks run both ways. As generative AI reshapes how users search for information, Apple faces mounting pressure to adapt while trying to preserve its $20 billion-a-year arrangement.

“I’ve lost a lot of sleep thinking about it,” Cue said.

Cassandra Buchman (Digital Producer) and Jack Henry (Video Editor) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

Apple's exploration of AI-powered search alternatives threatens its $20 billion partnership with Google and signals a potential shift in the search engine market that could reshape how users find information online.

AI disruption

The rise of generative AI tools is potentially changing user search behavior, with Apple's senior vice president of services Eddy Cue testifying that searches through Safari declined in April.

Market reaction

Alphabet's stock dropped over 7% following Cue's testimony, erasing nearly $150 billion in market value, indicating investors' concerns about potential disruption to Google's core business.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 122 media outlets

Common ground

Across the articles, there is consensus that Google's launch of AI Mode represents a significant technological shift and that it is currently an experimental, opt-in feature available to Google One AI Premium subscribers. Additionally, sources widely acknowledge both the potential benefits (faster, more nuanced responses) and the risks (inaccuracies and misinformation) of AI-driven search results.

Policy impact

The experimental introduction of AI Mode has policy implications regarding intellectual property, fair competition and content attribution. Regulators in the U.S. and abroad are reportedly monitoring Google’s practices, with some pursuing antitrust cases that may affect how such AI-driven features are deployed in the future and how web traffic is distributed.

Terms to know

AI Overviews: AI-generated summaries appearing at the top of search results. Gemini 2.0: Google’s latest AI model powering these features. AI Mode: An experimental, opt-in search experience delivering AI-driven responses and follow-up capabilities. Knowledge Graph: Google’s database of facts about people, places, and things. Hallucinations: Incorrect or fabricated AI outputs.

Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left framed Apple’s AI search integration as a challenge to Google’s dominance and emphasized user choice while criticizing Google’s corporate power.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Media outlets on the right depicted Apple’s move as a “seismic shift” threatening Google’s “monopoly” and “dominance," and highlighted antitrust ramifications and competitor statistics like ChatGPT’s billion-user base.

Media landscape

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122 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Eddy Cue, Apple's senior vice president of services, testified that searches on Safari decreased and attributed this to users preferring AI, according to Bloomberg News.
  • Cue said that AI search providers like OpenAI might eventually replace traditional search engines like Google.
  • Google pays Apple about $20 billion annually to remain the default search engine on Safari, analysts estimated.

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Key points from the Center

  • Apple's senior vice president Eddy Cue disclosed that Apple is considering reshaping Safari to include AI-powered search engines like OpenAI and Perplexity.
  • This move follows a first-ever decline in Safari searches in April 2025. Apple has an ongoing $20 billion search engine deal with Google.

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Key points from the Right

  • Apple plans to add AI-powered search options to its Safari browser, which could significantly impact Google.
  • Shares of Alphabet, Google's parent company, dropped 7.3% on May 7, resulting in a loss of approximately US$150 billion in market value.

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Other (sources without bias rating):

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