As of today, searching the Web with Siri or Spotlight on iOS and macOS devices will show you results from Google, not Microsoft’s Bing search engine. This ends a Bing integration that was introduced in iOS 7 back in 2013.

Google was already the default search engine in Safari in both iOS and macOS, and Apple is positioning this as a move for consistency, though there may be other reasons that have not been disclosed. In a statement released to TechCrunch, Apple said:

Switching to Google as the Web search provider for Siri, Search within iOS, and Spotlight on Mac will allow these services to have a consistent Web search experience with the default in Safari. We have strong relationships with Google and Microsoft and remain committed to delivering the best user experience possible.

Bing isn’t completely gone, though; Siri will still use Web image results from the service. Also, you can still ask Siri to “search Bing for Flatliners movie reviews,” for example, and you’ll get Bing results. However, they will now open in the Safari app instead of inside the Siri interface. Video results will come from YouTube.

Microsoft also released a statement to TechCrunch in response to the news:

We value our relationship with Apple and look forward to continuing to partner with them in many ways, including on Bing Image Search in Siri, to provide the best experience possible for our customers. Bing has grown every year since its launch, now powering over a third of all the PC search volume in the US, and continues to grow worldwide. It also powers the search experiences of many other partners, including Yahoo (Verizon), AOL, and Amazon, as well as the multilingual abilities of Twitter. As we move forward, given our work to advance the field of AI, we’re confident that Bing will be at the forefront of providing a more intelligent search experience for our customers and partners.

Google is clearly the search-engine market leader, but Microsoft has recently claimed that 33 percent of searches in the United States were performed in Bing. The company did not, however, drill down into what drove those searches or whether that included Siri usage.