Drop a link into Siri AI and ask for a summary. What you get back isn’t a condensed version of the article or a helpful overview. It’s a wall. That’s not a glitch. Apple literally wrote the refusal into Siri AI’s system prompt in
iOS 27 beta 2— a deliberate policy move that says something real about how Apple sees
AI’s relationshipwith the open web.
What the System Prompt Actually Says #
Apple hardcoded a new restriction into Siri AI’s behavioral rulebook, leaving zero room for interpretation.
A system prompt is the set of backstage instructions governing how an AI behaves. In iOS 27 beta 2, Apple added pointed new language to Siri AI’s prompt, as reported by 9to5Mac: “When a user provides a URL and asks you to summarize, read, or extract information from it, inform them that you cannot access web pages. Do not offer follow-up suggestions or workarounds.”
Siri AI technically couldn’t fetch URLs before, but earlier responses were vague enough to confuse users — partial answers, implied access, ambiguous hedging. Now that ambiguity is gone.
For beta testers, the practical effects are straightforward:
- Siri AI will not summarize, read, or extract content from any shared link.
- It will explicitly tell you it cannot access web pages.
- It won’t suggest alternatives like “paste the text here instead.”
- Safari’s still work — but only while you’re actively on the page.Apple Intelligence summaries
Apple hasn’t officially explained the decision. The pattern, though, is readable. Other AI chatbots that fetch and repackage URLs have drawn sharp criticism for essentially dine-and-dashing on publishers — consuming their content without sending readers through the front door. Apple appears to be drawing a deliberate line between on-page assistance and off-page extraction. Safari can summarize while you visit the site. Siri AI will not pull that content from a link alone.
As 9to5Mac reported, “the rule may be intended to keep Siri AI from following other AI chatbots in pulling and summarizing website content without sending users to the original pages, a practice that could make the web increasingly unsustainable over time.”
A Smarter Move Than It Looks #
Beta testers are split on this one, and honestly, both sides have a point.
Frustration is real. A next-generation assistant that can’t match what ChatGPT or Perplexity handle routinely feels like arriving at a Formula 1 race with a speed limiter engaged. That’s a fair complaint. But others read the restraint differently: Apple isn’t quietly scraping the web and repackaging it, which matters to publishers, regulators, and anyone tracking where AI copyright battles are heading.
This is still a developer beta. Apple could adjust the rule before public release. But hardcoding a restriction into the system prompt isn’t how you accidentally limit a feature — it’s how you make a statement. The real question isn’t what Siri AI won’t do. It’s whether that restraint becomes a competitive liability or a principled edge.