Microsoft is opening up its AI assistant, Copilot, to customers and making the corporate version available to smaller companies. The company is selling a $20-a-month consumer version of Copilot with access to OpenAI s latest ChatGPT technology and image-creation features.
OpenAI clarified that its policy does not allow tools to be used for harm, weapons development, communications surveillance, or to injure others or destroy property, but it does allow for national security use cases that align with its mission
App store intelligence provider Appfigures suggests that Copilot failed to grab the attention of potential consumers because Microsoft launched it without fanfare.
From devices for the visually impaired, and safety systems involving guns at schools, to facial-recognition software that can assess vitals, and cabin-monitoring systems inside autonomous cars, dozens of companies have planned announcements for the show about how they are building AI into their gadgets.