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HomeTechnologyHere’s what Elon Musk’s lawsuit against Apple and OpenAI is really trying to achieve

Here’s what Elon Musk’s lawsuit against Apple and OpenAI is really trying to achieve

New filings show that Elon Musk’s lawsuit against Apple and OpenAI is less about Grok’s App Store visibility and more about trying to shift iOS in favour of X’s long-standing super app ambitions.

December 14, 2025 / 10:22 IST
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Elon Musk

Newly surfaced filings indicate that Elon Musk’s antitrust lawsuit against Apple and OpenAI is less about Grok’s App Store ranking and far more about a bigger, older ambition. At the centre of the complaint is Musk’s belief that Apple’s growing partnership with OpenAI makes it harder for X and xAI to evolve into a Western super app, a goal Musk has publicly chased since buying Twitter in 2022.

The public narrative around the lawsuit began when Grok briefly climbed the App Store charts last July. The model upgrades and new tools helped the app jump from sixtieth place to twenty ninth, before a wider free rollout pushed it to fifth. Musk argued that Apple was suppressing Grok’s visibility despite the data showing normal chart behaviour. Apple rejected the accusation, as did Sam Altman. Musk then filed the lawsuit, framing it as a battle against two alleged monopolies working together to protect their dominance in smartphones and AI.

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Inside the complaint, xAI accuses Apple of giving OpenAI preferential placement in the App Store and restricting rival chatbots. It claims this behaviour protects Apple’s iPhone business while entrenching ChatGPT as the default AI assistant on iOS, leaving users with no alternative even if they prefer Grok. The filing portrays Apple as having missed the AI wave and now depending on OpenAI to stay competitive.

Judge Mark Pittman has refused to dismiss the case outright, asking instead for more factual evidence. That move triggered a new phase. xAI immediately began seeking documents from KakaoTalk and Alipay, both major Asian super apps. The letters argue that super apps give users enough utility to consider switching smartphone platforms and that Apple’s exclusive arrangement with OpenAI prevents similar products from thriving in the United States.