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IOS 27 public beta arrives with siri ai overhaul, other Apple updates

Siri AI iOS 27 beta

Apple released public betas for iOS 27 and its other major operating system updates on Wednesday, giving users an early look at software set to launch broadly this fall. The headline addition this year is Siri AI, the long-delayed overhaul of Siri that adds AI-powered capabilities to the assistant. Early testing shows the feature actually functions as intended, though its responses tend to stay brief rather than conversational.

Apple also opened public betas for iPadOS 27, watchOS 27, and macOS 27 Golden Gate alongside the iOS update. All four betas are available now for anyone willing to install pre-release software on their devices.

What to expect from beta software

Installing a public beta comes with tradeoffs. Users testing early software may encounter glitches, app crashes, or faster battery drain than they’re used to on a stable release. Apple’s betas are functional but not fully polished, since the company uses this testing period to catch bugs before the official fall release. Anyone considering the install should weigh whether they’re comfortable dealing with those issues on a primary device.

Backing up your device before installing any beta is strongly recommended. If a beta causes problems serious enough to warrant reverting to the current public release, a backup makes that process far easier.

How to join the beta program

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To install the iOS 27 public beta, visit Apple’s beta software page at beta.apple.com and sign up for the program. After backing up your device, open the Settings app and navigate to General, then Software Update. A “Beta Updates” section will appear near the top of the screen. Tap it, then select the iOS 27 public beta to begin the download.

The process works similarly across Apple’s other platforms. iPad users follow the same steps within iPadOS settings, while Apple Watch and Mac users can find comparable beta enrollment options within their respective settings menus after signing up through the same beta portal.

Siri AI takes center stage

Siri’s AI-powered update has been one of Apple’s most anticipated software changes in recent years, following repeated delays to the project. The version now available in the iOS 27 beta represents Apple’s first public look at the reworked assistant, and early impressions suggest it performs its core functions reliably. Its tendency toward short, direct answers rather than longer conversational responses marks a notable design choice, one that sets it apart from AI assistants built by competitors that lean toward more expansive replies.

For users who rely heavily on Siri for daily tasks, the beta offers a chance to test the new AI capabilities months before the general public gets access when iOS 27 launches this fall alongside new iPhone hardware expected around the same time.

Apple has not detailed a specific release date for the final version of iOS 27, though the company’s pattern in recent years points to a launch timed with new iPhone announcements in September.

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OpenAI has formally replied to a wrongful-death lawsuit filed by the family of 16-year-old Adam Raine, contending that the tragedy was due to what it called the teen’s “misuse” and “unauthorized use” of ChatGPT – and not from the chatbot’s design or behavior.

The legal response, first reported by NBC News, marks the company’s first detailed rebuttal since the lawsuit was filed in August in California Superior Court. The case has drawn nationwide attention because it centers on a difficult and deeply emotional question: What responsibility do AI developers have when their products are used in sensitive or dangerous ways by minors?

OpenAI Cites Terms of Use and Section 230 Protections

In its court filing, OpenAI said Raine’s death was the result of actions outside the intended scope of the platform, pointing to several violations of its terms of use. Those terms restrict access by minors without parental consent and prohibit using the system for discussions involving self-harm.

The company also invoked Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, a long-standing legal shield that limits liability for online platforms when it comes to user interactions and user-generated content. OpenAI argued that the family’s claims are barred under that federal protection.

Company: ChatGPT Kept Telling Him to Get Help

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According to reporting from NBC News and Bloomberg, OpenAI told the court that ChatGPT repeatedly encouraged Raine to reach out to crisis-support resources, such as helplines, mental-health professionals, and trusted adults. The company said these reminders appeared more than 100 times throughout his months-long conversations.

“A full reading of his chat history shows that his death, while devastating, was not caused by ChatGPT,” said OpenAI, insisting that the AI system didn’t encourage dangerous actions and was never designed to provide support in high-risk emotional situations.

Family Says Responsibility Lies With OpenAI’s Product Design

The Raine family, on the contrary, believes that the teenager became increasingly dependent on the chatbot, which they argue evolved from a helpful academic tool to an emotional one, actually worsening his distress.

Their lawsuit alleges that “intentional design choices” at the time of the rollout of GPT-4o, one of OpenAI’s most advanced models, made for an environment that could mislead and manipulate vulnerable users. They also say the company failed to build appropriate safeguards to protect minors.

The complaint points out that GPT-4o’s release helped fuel OpenAI’s valuation jump from $86 billion to around $300 billion. It accuses the company of putting rapid product growth ahead of safety.

OpenAI Says Excerpts from Family Lack Context

In a Tuesday blog post, OpenAI addressed the public controversy for the first time since the lawsuit gained national headlines. The company said it would defend itself “with respect for the complexity and human impact” surrounding the case, noting that some excerpts in the family’s complaint were taken from longer messages that “require more context.”

The full transcripts were filed under seal with the court by OpenAI, meaning they are not publicly available.

New Safeguards Rolled Out After Lawsuit

The day after the lawsuit was filed, OpenAI announced the introduction of parental controls on its platform-a feature many safety experts had been urging for months. Since then, the company has rolled out additional safeguards aimed at helping protect teens when conversations get emotionally sensitive.

These changes include stronger detection of crisis-related language and more consistent redirection to appropriate help resources.

A Landmark Case for the AI Industry

The lawsuit comes at a time when regulators, lawmakers, and parents are increasingly concerned about how AI interacts with young users. With more teens turning to chatbots for help with everything from academics to companionship, experts say the case could set an important legal precedent about the responsibilities of AI developers. Both sides are preparing for what could be one of the first major court battles testing AI liability, youth safety and the limits of Section 230 in the age of advanced artificial intelligence.

The Trump administration has officially disbanded the Department of Government Efficiency-an experimental, Musk-backed federal cost-cutting initiative-months before its expected mandate was set to expire. The abrupt dissolution brings an end to one of Trump’s most controversial government reform projects.

According to a Reuters report published over the weekend, DOGE has effectively gone out of business-a demise many sources called the end of a high-profile effort led by billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk and a team of advisers drawn largely from his private-sector companies that had set out to overhaul federal spending, eliminate what the administration called “rampant waste,” and cut the federal workforce.

A Short-Lived Experiment in Government “Efficiency”

Created through an executive order by former President Donald Trump back in January, the project was intended to run nearly two years, positioning Musk as the unofficial head of a sweeping attempt to reshape federal operations using Silicon Valley–style efficiency models.

However, by early November, the unit had already dissolved.

“DOGE doesn’t exist,” Scott Kupor, director of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, or OPM, which oversees federal hiring and HR policies, told staff Wednesday in a virtual meeting. His comments marked the end of a months-long effort that already had drawn intense criticism from lawmakers, federal unions and government watchdogs.

Kupor explained further on X that, although DOGE does not have any “centralized leadership” at the U.S. Digital Service anymore, the administration still adheres to its core principles of streamlining government processes, cutting unnecessary bureaucracy and reducing regulatory hurdles.

Internal Confusion and Public Denials

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The sudden collapse of DOGE sent shockwaves within the federal workforce. Amy Gleason, named this year as the acting administrator of DOGE, took to Twitter in response to stories of the unit’s demise, posting a meme — an homage to the viral “Doge” dog — captioned “I’m alive,” which suggested internal communication regarding the unit’s status was fractured or unclear.

Despite these contradictions, sources say DOGE’s central operations have been inactive for weeks.

Claims of Billions Saved — But Critics Dispute the Math

During its short life, DOGE often boasted that its aggressive cuts had saved taxpayers “billions of dollars.” Those figures, though, were both unverified and inflated, lawmakers and policy experts say. Critics maintain the initiative caused much more harm than good by tearing down vital government services without proper impact analysis or measurable savings.

Perhaps the most controversial move attributed to DOGE was its association with shuttering the U.S. Agency for International Development, a major global humanitarian relief organization. That decision left millions around the world without access to crucial aid programs and international partners who blamed the decision for exacerbating global crises including famine and the spread of diseases.

Security Concerns and Data Risks

DOGE also faced accusations of egregious data security failures. During the course of its operations, staff were said to have accessed highly sensitive federal databases containing personal information on millions of Americans. A number of watchdog groups warned that the DOGE personnel-many of whom had minimal to zero government clearance-were a serious cybersecurity risk, exposing federal systems to foreign adversaries or internal misuse.

Musk’s Exit and Growing Legal Fears Among DOGE Staff

Elon Musk left the project this year amid a highly publicised falling-out with President Trump, which further destabilised leadership of DOGE.

Reports from Politico show that a number of former DOGE staffers are concerned about potential future criminal exposure. Apparently, without protection from Musk or the possibility of presidential pardons, some believe that they might be held responsible for things they did during the operation of DOGE.

Where DOGE Staffers Are Now

According to Reuters, several former DOGE employees have moved to other federal agencies while others have left government altogether. One of DOGE’s most recognizable staffers, Edward Coristine — who became a viral figure online under the nickname “Big Balls” — announced on X in June that he was “officially out” of DOGE. The long-term impact of DOGE’s brief overhaul has yet to be seen, but analysts say its explosion illuminates ongoing hurdles in combining private-sector disruption culture with the structure and protections needed at the federal level of government.

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