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The Musk-OpenAI Trial and the New Siri: Does 2026 Mark a Crisis of Trust in Artificial Intelligence?
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The Musk-OpenAI Trial and the New Siri: Does 2026 Mark a Crisis of Trust in Artificial Intelligence?

[2026-05-17] Author: Meteora Web Redazione
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We are in the middle of a watershed moment for artificial intelligence. The question echoing through courtrooms, university campuses, and big tech headquarters is a simple one: who can we truly trust with our digital future? The final weeks of May deliver three seemingly separate events that are deeply intertwined, painting a picture of growing distrust towards the AI ecosystem. On one side, the final days of the trial between Elon Musk and OpenAI put Sam Altman’s reliability under the spotlight, with testimonies digging into startup culture and broken promises. On the other, commencement speeches in 2026 reveal a worrying trend: graduating students do not want to hear about artificial intelligence, a sign of a generation that fears its impact on jobs and society. In between, Apple moves with a step many interpret as a direct response to this climate of suspicion: the new Siri app will offer auto-deleting chat options.

The Court of Trust: Musk vs. OpenAI

The final hearings of the Musk versus OpenAI case did not only dissect old emails and financial agreements. They raised a philosophical question that concerns the entire industry. The defense tried to paint Sam Altman as a visionary who had to betray open source idealism to survive commercially. The prosecution, instead, insisted on the word 'trust' as a broken pillar. The verdict, expected in the coming weeks, might not only decide corporate fates but set a precedent on how founders’ promises in AI must be binding. This story fits perfectly into the broader debate addressed in our recent deep dive into the AI divide between haves and have-nots, where the concentration of decision-making power in a few leaders becomes a systemic problem.

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The Generation That Rejects AI

In parallel, an investigation by TechCrunch revealed a trend that caught many American commencement speakers off guard. Advising graduates to embrace artificial intelligence as an opportunity is backfiring. Speeches that mention AI are met with skepticism, if not open hostility. This Generation Z, raised among deepfakes, job losses, and speculative bubbles, no longer believes in the narrative of AI as an exclusively positive force. Trust in technological progress has reached a breaking point. This is not a rejection of technology per se, but a clear demand for transparency and control. This social climate deeply influences the product strategies of companies.

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Apple’s Answer: A Siri That Forgets

It is precisely in this context that news from Bloomberg arrives about the new Siri app under development at Apple. Internal sources reveal that the voice assistant will offer variable message retention options: 30 days, one year, or forever, with automatic background deletion. A move that seems carefully crafted to respond to the privacy needs that emerged both in courtrooms and on campuses. Apple is betting that the ability to forget becomes a competitive advantage in a market where rivals (Google, OpenAI, Meta) are perceived as endless data hoarders. Offering users full control over their conversational history sends a powerful signal: trust is also built by giving people the power to erase the past.

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However, one must ask whether it will be enough. While major funds like Eclipse and Cerebras continue to bet millions on physical AI, as we analyzed in our article on Eclipse and Cerebras, the gap between those who develop and those who endure AI is widening. The challenge for 2026 and beyond is not only technical but anthropological. Restoring a pact of trust between innovators and civil society will require much more than an auto-cleaning feature. It will demand participatory governance and a narrative that does not ignore legitimate fears. And perhaps, as the silence of the graduates suggests, a bit of humility from those leading this revolution.

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