Microsoft this week tried to address the growing challenges surrounding notetaker bots in meetings by giving IT better control over them.
Microsoft’s announcement said that users of Microsoft Teams will be able to block non-Microsoft bots “even in meetings where organizers allow participants to bypass the lobby.”
When the feature is enabled, Teams automatically detects potential bots, places them in the meeting lobby, clearly identifies them, and prompts organizers to confirm admission, Microsoft said, and even in meetings where organizers allow human participants to bypass the lobby, bots identified through this new policy will continue to require approval before joining.
“We’ve strengthened Teams’ ability to distinguish between bots and human participants as they join a meeting,” the company said. “Teams now uses a combination of behavioral and infrastructure signals to identify bots with a higher degree of accuracy. Alongside these improvements, soon we’ll introduce a registration p
Investor concerns over Microsoft's AI lag highlight the broader risk of traditional software firms losing ground in an AI-driven market.
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Microsoft is expected to announce a new round of layoffs next week, with several thousand jobs at stake, according to Business Insider. Among others, the company’s sales, consulting, and Xbox divisions will be affected.
The cuts are reported to affect less than 2.5% of Microsoft’s approximately 220,000 employees worldwide, meaning the layoffs will be less extensive than last year’s workforce reductions.
In 2025, Microsoft laid off approximately 15,000 employees in two rounds: 6,000 workers in May, followed by another 9,000 in July.
The company is reportedly rolling out the cost-cutting measures while continuing to boost investments in AI. Microsoft has faced increased pressure from investors regarding how AI will affect the company’s future business model and cost structure.
Earlier this year, the company for the first time in its history offered voluntary retirement buyouts to roughly 8,750 employees, or about 7% of its workforce.
Microsoft's strategic shift to prioritize impactful AI features over widespread integration may redefine industry standards for AI utility.
The post Microsoft’s Jacob Andreou is killing off low-value Copilot features, and the AI market should take notes appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Microsoft's AI reorganization aims to enhance user integration and revenue, positioning it competitively against OpenAI and Google.
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Microsoft has announced the creation of Microsoft Frontier Company, a new operating business backed by $2.5 billion and 6,000 industry and engineering specialists, designed to ensure successful AI deployments for enterprise clients using Microsoft’s existing suite of AI tools. Judson Althoff, CEO of Microsoft’s Commercial Business, positioned the venture as something larger than the forward-deployed […]
Microsoft's AI pivot highlights a tech industry trend of workforce reductions to fund AI advancements, raising investor uncertainty and ethical concerns.
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Misleading buzz around Microsoft's "Frontier Company" highlights the need for clarity in AI strategy communication to prevent misinformation.
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