We Don't Use Your Word, Excel Data for AI Training
A digital twin of St. Peter’s Basilica has been created using artificial intelligence to explore one of the world’s most important monument’s.
Autonomous agents, consumption-based infrastructure, and improved governance were the key themes at Microsoft Ignite 2024.
Microsoft has denied claims that it uses Microsoft 365 apps (including Word, Excel, and PowerPoint) to collect data to train the company's artificial intelligence (AI) models.
People are increasingly worried about how AI affects them. Will our jobs become obsolete? Are we constantly being tracked online and in the real world? Most recently, people have raised concerns about whether our creative and professional work is being used to train large language models.
Microsoft has reached out to confirm that it does not use customer data to train its large language models. They
In the latest controversy, Microsoft has refuted the claim stating that it doesn't use Word documents or Excel data to train its AI models.
All of the recent hullabaloo surrounding Microsoft 365's 'connected experiences' has been a misunderstanding, per the company.
Microsoft has aggressively added AI-powered Copilots to nearly all its products, but that doesn't necessarily mean your data is being used to train their models. Why it matters: You won't know how much data you might be sharing with Microsoft's AI developers unless you dig into the firm's policies and know your options.
Last week, Nvidia Corporation (NASDAQ: NVDA) issued its third quarter results, topping both sales and earnings estimates as well as posting a better-than-expected current quarter guidance as its end-customers,
We recently compiled a list of the 15 AI News You Should Not Ignore. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) stands against the other AI stocks. Even as the United States pursues a tougher trade policy towards China,