Microsoft now says Copilot AI is meant for entertainment purposes only, use at your own risk

Microsoft has changed the terms of use for its Copilot AI tools. The Redmond giant now states that Copilot is designed for “entertainment purposes only.” And you should use “Copilot at your own risk.”

Do note that Copilot is a tool that is aimed at increasing productivity across Microsoft’s 365 suite of apps such as Excel and PowerPoint. The company has pushed Copilot particularly for entreprise users in the past, while also bringing the tool for consumers.

Recently, it was found that Microsoft has 78 different products with the Copilot name.

Why did Microsoft make this change?

Though it appears that the new terms of use may be intended at shifting the responsibility of the potential inaccuracy made by Copilot. As per the official Microsoft website, this change in terms of use was made in October last year.

Large Language Models (LLMs) like OpenAI’s GPT or Anthropic’s Claude, are prone to hallucinations, that is, the AI may make things up instead of actually presenting real information. While this has reduced, it still remains a problem. Microsoft’s updated terms of use does hint that the company is still cautious over potential accuracies made by AI.

The updated terms would keep Microsoft clear of any legal claims that may be caused by inaccurate information given by the AI.

Copilot Microsoft

A screenshot of the updated terms of use for Copilot.

You can still use Copilot for work

Microsoft is not exactly telling you to stop using Copilot for work completely. The company, in essence, is stating that it will not be held accountable for any mistakes the AI makes.

Rather, it wants you to use Copilot as a tool, and not a decision maker. The company wants users to fact-check information Copilot provides before relying on it for any important work.

Do note that most AI models do come with disclaimers regarding potential inaccuracies and mistakes it may make.

Microsoft is selling more Copilot

Microsoft has also not stopped pushing Copilot as a work productivity tool. According to a report from Bloomberg, Microsoft CEO Judson Althoff recently stated in an internal meeting that the company had hit “some pretty big audacious goals” for selling Copilot in the last quarter.

In January, the company had confirmed that only 3 per cent of its customers were paying for Copilot as of December 31, 2025.

Earlier this year, the company introduced Copilot Cowork to further boost productivity with AI. Copilot Cowork is built on Anthropic’s Claude Cowork – the tool that rattled SaaS companies like TCS and Infosys.

The company has also used terms like “vibe working” – the use of AI to do work – while marketing Copilot in the past.

Latest

I switched to the Nothing Phone 4a Pro, and it changed how I look at mid-range phones

Nothing Phone 4a Pro brings subtle upgrades, a cleaner design, and more. But do these changes actually justify their value? Let’s find out in this review.

IPhone 18 Pro and 18 Pro Max launching soon in India, everything you need to know

Apple will soon be launching the iPhone 18 Pro series in India, with rumours surfacing online over what these two devices may pack. From new colours to better p

Samsung, Mistral AI discuss cooperation in AI memory sector

Samsung Electronics and Mistral AI explored AI memory collaboration and chip supply partnerships. CEO Arthur Mensch met executives in Korea to secure semiconduc

One plane with 78 copilots? Ex-McKinsey partner counts Microsoft AI tools

Former McKinsey partner Tey Bannerman has revealed that Microsoft has 78 different Copilot tools across its various platforms and services. These 78 products in

Sam Altman does not want to raise an iPad kid, wants his child to play in dirt

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman says that he doesn’t want his child to grow up on an iPad. Rather, he wants his newborn to spend time outside in the dirt. Altman has pr

Topics

Yes Mr Secretary of War, back to the Stone Age we go now

A brief but striking remark from the Secretary of War signals concern

Iran or India: Which civilisation came first? Experts break it down

Debate over Iran and India's civilisational age highlights complexity of historical timelines

MBOSE 10th Result 2026: Meghalaya Board SSLC results releasing tomorrow at mbose.in

MBOSE 10th Result 2026 will be declared on April 7, 2026. The steps to check Meghalaya Board SSLC results is given here. 

Meghalaya Board to declare Class 10 results tomorrow at 11 am. Details here

The wait is almost over for Meghalaya Class 10 students as the MBOSE SSLC Result 2026 will be declared on April 7 at 11 am, with scorecards available online thr

RTE Maharashtra Admission 2026: Lottery result released at student.maharashtra.gov.in, link here

RTE Maharashtra Admission 2026 lottery result has been released. The direct link to check is given here. 

Harvard opens 6 free AI and coding courses, here’s how you can start today

From AI to web development, Harvard is making top-tier learning free and accessible. These six courses could be your easiest entry into the world of tech.

IIM Sambalpur awards degrees to 416 students, marks 10th convocation milestone

IIM Sambalpur celebrated its 10th convocation on April 4. A total of 416 students were awarded degrees. 

TS EAMCET 2026: Correction window opens at eapcet.tgche.ac.in, here’s how to make changes

TS EAMCET 2026 correction window opens. The direct link to make changes is given here. 
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img