Apple on Thursday introduced a new set of App Review Guidelines for developers, which now specifically state that apps must disclose and obtain usersโ permission before sharing personal data with third-party AI.
The change comes ahead of the iPhone makerโs plan to introduce its own AI-upgraded version of Siri in 2026.
That update will see Appleโs digital assistant offer users the ability to take actions across apps using Siri commands, and will be powered, in part, by Googleโs Gemini technology, according to a recent Bloomberg report.
At the same time, Apple is ensuring other apps arenโt leaking personal data to AI providers or other AI businesses.
Whatโs interesting about this particular update is not the requirements being described but that Apple has specifically called out AI companies as needing to come into compliance.
Before the revised language, the guideline known as rule 5.1.2(i) included language around disclosure and obtaining user consent for data sharing, noting that apps could not โuse, transmit or shareโ someoneโs personal data without their permission. This rule served as part of Appleโs compliance with data privacy regulations like the EUโs GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), Californiaโs Consumer Privacy Act, and others, which ensure that users have more control over how their data is collected and shared. Apps that donโt follow the policy can be removed from the App Store.
The newly revised guideline adds the following sentence (emphasis ours):
You must clearly disclose where personal data will be shared with third parties, including with third-party AI, and obtain explicit permission before doing so.
This change could impact apps that intend to use AI systems to collect or process information about their users, perhaps to personalize their apps or provide certain functionality. Itโs unclear how stringently Apple will enforce the rule, given that the term โAIโ could include a variety of technologies โ not just LLMs, but also things like machine learning.
The updated rule is one of several revisions to the App Review Guidelines out on Thursday. Other changes are focused on supporting Appleโs new Mini Apps Program, also announced today, as well as tweaks to rules involving creator apps, loan apps, and more.
One addition also added crypto exchanges to the list of apps that provide services in highly regulated fields.


