Users recently accused Microsoft of screenshotting their gameplay to train AI without consent, and the company has now issued ...
After I put soapy water in the blender, which I placed on the stove to get it out of the way, I turned it on to clean it. Foam poured out all over, which I quickly mopped up. Moments later, while ...
Unlock Windows 11's hidden features, get the most out of AI tools, and customize your PC like a pro with these game-changing ...
The tool appears to scan gameplay screenshots using OCR (optical character recognition) to identify on-screen text — such as quest objectives or achievement prompts — before sending that data back to ...
The battery life is reliable, too. How long it lasts will depend on what you’re doing, but the brand claims it can handle a ...
Microsoft has just released the Fall update for Copilot, the suite of AI tools that Redmond is determined to force-feed us all, and part of this is a whole lot of hot air about th ...
Fast-forward to today, and Microsoft is ready to try again with Copilot’s newest voice companion: a bouncy little orb named ...
Recently, a user spotted Microsoft secretly sending in-game screenshots and data to train its Gaming Copilot AI, which was ...
Copilot's fall release comes with a new animated character called Mico, and I think I finally get the Clippy hate now.
Mico is all part of a goal to give Copilot an identity, as Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman alluded to earlier this year.
Microsoft appears to be capturing large numbers of screenshots through Gaming Copilot, extracting text from them, and using the data to further train its AI models.
Is Mico a terrible idea? To computing enthusiasts like me and you, it doubtless seems that way, but it has a different target ...