It is rare that a single, three-letter message ends up cited in a courtroom filing, but that is roughly where the fight between Apple, OpenAI and Elon Musk’s xAI has landed. According to reporting in the Brisbane Times, an offhand “LOL” from an OpenAI engineer has been swept into the discovery pile as lawyers pick over how the world’s most valuable company decides which artificial intelligence apps get pushed to the top of its store.
For readers who have not been following the litigation closely, here is the shape of it. The dispute sits at the intersection of two of the biggest stories in technology: the commercial partnership between Apple and OpenAI, and the increasingly personal rivalry between OpenAI boss Sam Altman and Tesla and xAI founder Elon Musk. Musk, a co-founder of OpenAI who left the organisation years before it became a household name, has spent much of the past two years attacking the company he helped start, and his own AI venture xAI now competes directly with it.
What the message actually shows
The internal exchange matters because of what it is being used to argue, not because of its content. In antitrust and competition cases, everyday chatter between engineers and executives is exactly the sort of material that lawyers hunt for. A casual reaction to a decision about product placement, ranking or a competitor’s fortunes can be recast, months later, as evidence of intent. That is the game being played here: the “LOL” is not damning on its face, but it has become a thread that opposing lawyers can pull to suggest how people inside the tent really felt about the way Apple’s App Store surfaces AI tools.
The broader claim at the centre of the litigation is that Apple’s arrangement with OpenAI, which baked ChatGPT into the iPhone’s operating system, gives OpenAI an advantage that rivals cannot match. Critics argue that when one AI assistant is wired into the device itself and prominently featured in the store, competitors are fighting uphill from the first day. Apple and OpenAI reject the framing, pointing out that users can download and use whatever assistant they like, and that integration deals are common across the technology industry.
Two ways to read it
There are, broadly, two competing views of this fight, and both are worth taking seriously.
The first, advanced by Musk and his backers, is that a gatekeeper controlling the most valuable mobile platform on earth should not also be picking commercial winners in a nascent and hugely important market. On this reading, an exclusive or preferential tie-up between Apple and a single AI provider risks locking in an early leader before the market has had a chance to mature, and everyday messages showing insiders treating that advantage casually only reinforce the concern.
The second view, put by defenders of Apple and OpenAI, is that this is competitive sour grapes dressed up as a legal principle. On this account, xAI is losing a race it entered late, and litigation is a cheaper way to slow a rival than out-building it. They argue that App Store rankings reflect genuine user demand, that ChatGPT is popular because people choose it, and that isolated internal messages prove nothing about anti-competitive intent. Discovery, they note, is a fishing expedition by design, and a stray “LOL” is being asked to carry far more weight than it can bear.
Both positions cannot be right, and that is precisely why the case is being watched so closely. The outcome could help set the rules for how dominant platforms are allowed to promote their own AI partners at a moment when those decisions shape which tools billions of people reach for by default.
Why this lands in Australia
It would be easy to file this under distant American courtroom drama, but the questions it raises are live here too. Australia’s competition regulator, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, has spent years scrutinising the power of Apple and Google over their app marketplaces through its Digital Platform Services Inquiry. The commission has repeatedly flagged concerns about self-preferencing, opaque rankings and the leverage that operating system owners hold over the businesses that depend on them.
Layer generative AI on top of that and the stakes rise. Most Australians will encounter AI assistants not by seeking them out, but through whatever is built into their phone, browser or operating system. If the default assistant on an iPhone or an Android handset is effectively chosen for them, that shapes the market for local AI startups trying to win users, and for enterprises deciding which tools to standardise on. A homegrown Australian AI product competing for attention in the App Store faces the same ranking machinery now under the microscope in the United States.
There is also a policy dimension. The federal government has been consulting on mandatory guardrails for AI in high-risk settings, while separately weighing tougher rules for digital platforms modelled in part on the European Union’s Digital Markets Act. A finding overseas that a platform unfairly advantaged a favoured AI partner would give Australian regulators and lawmakers useful ammunition, and a template, as they decide how hard to push. Local developers and consumer advocates will be watching whether the courts treat AI distribution as just another app-store dispute or as something that warrants its own rules.
What happens next
In the near term, expect more of these small internal artefacts to surface as discovery grinds on. That is the nature of litigation between well-resourced technology companies: the story is told through emails, chat logs and slide decks that were never meant to be read aloud in court. Each side will keep hunting for the message that reframes the other’s conduct, and each will keep insisting the other is quoting selectively.
The larger question is whether the case reaches a substantive ruling or is settled quietly, as many of these disputes are. Either way, the direction of travel is clear. Regulators in Canberra, Brussels and Washington are increasingly unwilling to leave the plumbing of AI distribution to the platforms alone. For Australian businesses building on top of these ecosystems, the lesson is to watch the terms of engagement closely, and to assume that how AI tools are surfaced on a phone will remain contested ground for years yet.
Sources: Brisbane Times



















































