Skip to main content

Despite the controversy, Apple is bringing AI summaries to the App Store

Summarized notifications on Apple iPad mini with A17 Pro.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

After all the trouble caused by Apple’s AI summaries for news apps like the BBC and the New York Times, Apple is coming back for more. The company has announced that “review summaries” are officially coming to the App Store, aiming to squish the most common points from hundreds or thousands of reviews into one AI-generated summary.

First spotted by Macworld, Apple has announced the coming feature on its developer site. The beta will start in iOS 18.4 and iPadOS 18.4 as part of a phased rollout, beginning with English-only summaries for a limited number of apps.

Recommended Videos

Apple says the summaries will be refreshed at least once a week and will eventually appear for every app “with enough reviews.” It doesn’t mention how many reviews are considered “enough,” but we might get more information in the future.

As with a lot of AI summary features, this sounds like it could be useful if it can be trusted. However, it’s only been a few weeks since Apple’s AI incorrectly told people that tennis player, Rafael Nadal, had come out as gay — a perfect example of just how wrong AI can be about fairly important things.

Generating summaries for app reviews might not cause as much trouble as incorrect news headlines, but they could hurt app developers if things go wrong. If a summary accidentally includes an extreme opinion that only appeared in one out of thousands of reviews or just hallucinates something entirely, then app developers could find themselves losing out on downloads and purchases for no good reason.

Such inaccuracies wouldn’t benefit users either since they could miss out on a good app or end up downloading something that isn’t as good as the review summary made it out to be. However, it’s not impossible to do this well — Amazon has been using generated review summaries for nearly two years now, as has Microsoft.

Given Apple is playing catchup, it’s expected that this will have been tested to surface the right information — however, the rollout will be closely watched to see if the aggregation bugs have been ironed out for Apple.

Willow Roberts
Willow Roberts has been a Computing Writer at Digital Trends for a year and has been writing for about a decade. She has a…
App subscriptions may get cheaper as U.S. court forces Apple to change its app store payment rules
A photo of an Apple screen and a close-up of the App Store icon with three notifications on it.

Apple has revised app store guidelines for developers, allowing them to enable external links or payment gateways to pay for app purchases and subscriptions without any commission. The change comes a day after a California-based District Court ruled Apple had failed to comply with the 2021 judgment in the landmark Apple vs. Epic Games antitrust case, which held the Cupertino-based giant guilty of violating California's antitrust laws and forced it to open up external payments in apps.

With these revisions, apps listed on the iOS and macOS App Stores will no longer be "prohibited from including buttons, external links, or other calls to action" for payments outside the app. While these changes were already implemented last year, Apple required developers to apply for a special "entitlement" for them to allow payments through external sources. This would essentially allow developers to route users to click on a button within the app and take them to an external page where they could complete the transaction for purchases or subscriptions.

Read more
Apple Intelligence and Google Gemini could combine forces for a super AI, soon
Apple Intelligence and Gemini logos on a pink gradient background

In the fast developing world of artificial intelligence it looks like two powerful players could combine forces, as Apple Intelligence and Google Gemini potentially start to work together.

You may have already heard about Apple's ongoing antitrust trial in the US. What's new to come out of that is a statement from the Google CEO, Sundar Pichai, who spoke directly about the two AI platforms.

Read more
Meta’s new AI app lets you share your favorite prompts with friends
Meta AI WhatsApp widget.

Meta has been playing the AI game for a while now, but unlike ChatGPT, its models are usually integrated into existing platforms rather than standalone apps. That trend ends today -- the company has launched the Meta AI app and it appears to do everything ChatGPT does and more.

Powered by the latest Llama 4 model, the app is designed to "get to know you" using the conversations you have and information from your public Meta profiles. It's designed to work primarily with voice, and Meta says it has improved responses to feel more personal and conversational. There's experimental voice tech included too, which you can toggle on and off to test -- the difference is that apparently, full-duplex speech technology generates audio directly, rather than reading written responses.

Read more