Microsoft has vowed to defend its artificial intelligence products against copyright infringement charges, in an effort to assuage customers’ fears about using its AI “Copilots” to develop material based on existing work. Customers will be protected by the Microsoft Copilot Copyright Commitment as long as they employ the guardrails and content filters built into their products. Microsoft has agreed to pay any applicable penalties or settlements and has taken efforts to guarantee that its Copilots follow copyright laws.
Generative AI apps, created in collaboration with partner OpenAI, can produce fresh content that can be used to simplify or automate operations. Microsoft is incorporating the technology into several of its most important products, including Office and Windows, placing users in legal peril. Artists, authors, and software engineers are already suing or objecting to their works being exploited without their permission. News organizations are considering their own complaints, comedian Sarah Silverman has sued OpenAI and Meta Platforms Inc., and artists have launched a lawsuit in San Francisco against AI picture creators Stability AI and Midjourney.
The use of generative AI may create new problems concerning the fair use of copyrighted information, a legal defense that enables the use of content in certain circumstances. In the 2000s and 2017, Microsoft developed a legal shield to keep customers loyal, providing indemnity to partners and later customers using or reselling its software to safeguard clients of its Azure cloud products from legal claims.