Microsoft Launches Copilot Pro for Everyone, Introduces New Features - 1

Microsoft Launches Copilot Pro for Everyone, Introduces New Features

  • Written by Elijah Ugoh Cybersecurity & Tech Writer
  • Fact-Checked by

Microsoft announced last week that it’s extending its AI-powered assistant, Copilot Pro, to 222 countries, making it available to way more people globally. This comes following its initial launch in January .

Copilot was introduced as “Bing Chat” in Feb 2023 and was meant as a replacement for the Cortana virtual assistant. The quick release of Microsoft’s Copilot brings the company up to par with competition like ChatGPT, which has been available since November 2022. Copilot comes with the latest Windows 11 update, Microsoft 365 subscriptions (Windows and Mac), and the Edge web browser with Bing.

Microsoft introduced Copilot in late 2023 as a replacement for Bing Chat and Bing Chat Enterprise in Windows 11. It essentially merged these two products into one, called Microsoft Copilot. Originally only available to businesses, it was soon afterward made available to regular consumers .

Copilot Pro is included in Microsoft 365, offering additional features like generating entire PowerPoint slides from a simple chat prompt, rephrasing paragraphs in Word, summarizing documents, and replying to emails or creating new ones. Copilot Pro also appears in Excel for analyzing data and generating graphs.

Microsoft is also extending Copilot Pro capabilities to their free mobile apps in the coming months, including the Microsoft 365 app and Outlook for iOS and Android.

OpenAI’s Text-to-Video Generator Will Soon be Publicly Available - 2

OpenAI’s Text-to-Video Generator Will Soon be Publicly Available

  • Written by Deep Shikha Content Writer
  • Fact-Checked by

OpenAI’s much-awaited text-to-video generator, Sora, is set to make its public debut later this year. In a recent interview with The Wall Street Journal , OpenAI CTO Mira Murati hinted that Sora will be available to the public in a few more months.

Sora made its first appearance in February, which can generate hyperrealistic scenes from just text input. So far, the company has only made it available to visual artists, filmmakers, and designers. Still, it has already gained popularity on platforms like X based on what it is capable of doing.

Murati also revealed that they will eventually incorporate sound into the tool so the videos it generates can be more realistic. In addition, she talked about the plans to make the outputs editable, as AIs don’t always produce accurate images and videos.

“We’re trying to figure out how to use this technology as a tool that people can edit and create with,” Murati told the Wall Street Journal. And there’s certainly a lot of criticism about how a tool like this can be harmful, with deepfake scams on the rise. Take the totally fake Taylor Swift Le Creuset ad or the Morgan Freeman deepfake video .

When prompted with questions about the data being used to train Sora, Murati refrained from getting too specific and mentioned that the model relies on publicly available data.

“I’m not going to go into the details of the data that was used, but it was publicly available or licensed data,” Murati added. She did confirm that Sora uses content from Shutterstock, with which OpenAI has a partnership .

Murati also told the journal that powering Sora is much more expensive than other AI models they’ve launched in the past. Despite this, OpenAI aims to keep it affordable, she said. Like DALL-E, Sora will have rules against making images of famous people and will use watermarks to mark AI-generated content to ensure it’s distinguishable from real content.