Microsoft has spent the past year pushing Copilot as a mainstream productivity tool, baking it into Windows 11 and promoting new hardware such as Copilot+ PCs, yet its own legal language urges caution. In Microsoft’s Copilot Terms of Use, updated in October last year, the company states Copilot is ‘for entertainment purposes only’, may ‘make mistakes’, and ‘may not work as intended’.
The terms warn users not to rely on Copilot for important advice and to ‘use Copilot at your own risk’, a caveat that sits uneasily alongside the product’s business-focused marketing.
The Tom’s Hardware article argues Microsoft is not unique in issuing such warnings. Similar disclaimers are common across the generative AI industry. It points to xAI’s guidance that AI is ‘probabilistic in nature’ and may produce ‘hallucinations’, generate offensive or objectionable content, or fail to reflect real people, places or facts.
While these limitations are well known to those familiar with large language models, the piece notes that many users still treat AI output as authoritative, even in professional settings where scepticism should be standard.
To underline the risks of overreliance, the text cites reports of Amazon-related incidents allegedly linked to ‘Gen-AI assisted changes’. It says some AWS outages were reportedly caused after engineers let an AI coding bot address an issue without sufficient oversight, and that Amazon’s website experienced ‘high blast radius’ problems that required senior engineers to step in. These examples are used to illustrate how AI-generated errors can propagate quickly in complex systems when humans fail to verify the output.
Why does it matter?
Overall, the article acknowledges that generative AI can boost productivity, but stresses it remains a tool with no accountability for mistakes, making verification essential. It warns that automation bias, people trusting machine outputs over contradictory evidence, can be intensified by AI systems that produce plausible-sounding answers that pass casual inspection.
While such disclaimers help companies limit legal liability, the piece suggests aggressive marketing of AI as a productivity ‘hack’ may downplay real-world risks, particularly as firms seek returns on the billions invested in AI hardware and talent.
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