Casablanca – Microsoft’s push to sell Copilot to businesses hit an awkward moment this week after users on social media resurfaced language in its terms of use that says the chatbot is “for entertainment purposes only.”
The wording, which appears in terms last updated on October 24, 2025, warns users that Copilot “can make mistakes,” “may not work as intended,” and should not be relied on for important advice. It also tells users to use the tool at their own risk.
The line drew attention because Microsoft has been aggressively marketing Copilot to corporate customers as a productivity tool for writing, research, and workplace tasks. The contrast between the sales pitch and the legal disclaimer quickly became fuel for skeptics online, many of whom questioned how much confidence the company itself has in its AI products.
A Microsoft spokesperson told PCMag the company plans to change what it called “legacy language.” According to the spokesperson, the wording no longer reflects how Copilot is used today and will be updated in the next revision of the terms.
Reports from other outlets said the phrase is a holdover from the product’s earlier days as a Bing companion, before it expanded into workplace software and enterprise subscriptions.
The episode also points to a wider pattern across the AI industry. OpenAI tells users not to treat chatbot output as a sole source of factual truth, while xAI similarly warns that users should not assume responses are “the truth.”
More people now turn to AI tools the way they might turn to a colleague or even a search engine, using them for everything from health questions and legal drafts to money matters and personal advice.
The confidence in these systems builds quickly, largely because the responses arrive instantly and are written in a clear, assured voice. That ease of use is part of the appeal, but it can also blur the line between helpful assistance and misplaced trust.
The disclaimers from the companies themselves are a reminder that users often believe these systems more than the people building them say they should. In practice, AI is becoming less of a search tool and more of a thinking shortcut, with many users relying on it in ways that go beyond simple assistance.
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