Siri Arrives in iOS 27 With Beta Label and Waitlist Access

What You Need to Know
- Apple plans to launch revamped Siri in iOS 18 with beta label and potential waitlist access.
- New Siri syncs chat history across devices and offers auto-delete options via iCloud settings.
- Original Siri carried beta tag for two years after 2011 launch, establishing Apple precedent.
- OpenAI and Google have trained users to expect reliable AI assistants, increasing competitive pressure on Apple.
Apple plans to ship its revamped conversational Siri later this year under an explicit “beta” or “preview” label, and access to some features may be gated behind a waitlist when iOS 27 launches in September.
That framing matters more than it might seem. Apple Intelligence was announced at WWDC 2024, and two years later the headline feature of that platform is still arriving with a qualifier attached. A waitlist on top of a beta label would mean Apple is simultaneously admitting the product is unfinished and rationing access to it.
The original Siri carried a beta tag for two years after its 2011 debut, so Apple has precedent for the approach. What’s different now is the competitive context: OpenAI and Google have spent those same two years training users to expect persistent, responsive AI assistants that work reliably today, not on a waitlist.
What the New Siri Actually Does
The functional changes Gurman describes are straightforward:
- Chat history syncs across devices via iCloud, matching what ChatGPT and Claude already offer
- Auto-delete options (30 days, one year, or never) are controlled through Settings, mirroring the existing Messages interface
- A dedicated Siri app will handle back-and-forth conversations at the system level
The auto-delete schedule is the one genuinely new privacy detail here. Apple is essentially treating Siri conversation data with the same controls it already applies to messages, which positions the feature as a privacy story even if the company doesn’t lead with that framing.
What Gurman does not clarify is which specific features might sit behind the waitlist. That ambiguity is the real story heading into Monday’s keynote. Apple could use the waitlist to manage server load, or to quietly delay the parts of the new Siri that aren’t ready, and from the outside those two scenarios would look identical.
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