Skip to main content

Microsoft Copilot now has a voice and can ‘see what you see’ on the internet

The new Surface Laptop 13 on a white table.
Luke Larsen / Digital Trends

You might want to start treating your web browser like you’re always at work, at least if you want to use Microsoft’s new Copilot Vision feature. The feature, which is natively built into Microsoft Edge, is able to “see what you see, and hear what you hear” as you navigate your browser, according to Microsoft’s Executive Vice President Yusuf Mehdi.

All of this AI snooping isn’t for nothing. Copilot Vision looks at what you’re doing online to answer questions, provide recommendations, and summarize content. It can work with the new Copilot Voice feature, for example. Microsoft demoed the capabilities on Rotten Tomatoes, showing a user chatting with Copilot while browsing the website and looking for movie recommendations. Ultimately, Copilot settled on an Australian comedy for the Australian speaker, saying it made the choice because, “well, you’re Australian.” I guess that’s taking personal context into account.

Recommended Videos

Understandably, the idea of an AI looking at everything you do online might rub some people the wrong way. Microsoft says the feature is opt-in only, meaning you have to manually turn it on, and that there will be an indicator onscreen showing that Copilot is watching what you’re doing. Microsoft also says that data from your session is deleted after you close the session, and that the data won’t be used for training.

In addition, Microsoft says that Copilot Vision will only initially work with a limited number of websites. We don’t have the full list yet, but at the very least, the feature won’t work on “paywalled or sensitive content.” Microsoft also points out that the feature doesn’t process anything on a webpage — it just sees the text and images on a page and analyzes them.

Copilot Voice works in conjunction with Copilot Vision, but it also works on its own. Across desktop and mobile devices, Microsoft says you’ll now be able to hold a conversation with Copilot using just your voice.

Copilot Daily in the Microsoft Edge browser.
Microsoft

Building on the new voice capabilities, Microsoft is releasing Copilot Daily. It’s almost like a personalized morning news show, rounding up stories and giving you daily details like traffic and weather. This, too, is built with a generative AI voice that walks you through your morning news every day. It’s generated based around the content you interact with.

Copilot Voice and Copilot Daily are rolling out to Windows users now in the U.S. and UK. Voice is also available in Australia, Canada, and New Zealand, but only in English. Microsoft says it will bring the feature to more countries and languages soon.

Copilot Vision is starting to roll out “soon” in the U.S., but only for Copilot Pro subscribers. The feature is part of Microsoft’s new Copilot Labs program, which gives Copilot Pro subscribers early access to Microsoft’s latest AI features that are still being tested.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Microsoft to finally fix everyone’s biggest complaint about Teams
Microsoft said that Teams has received a ground-up redesign, which will “empower customers to navigate the challenges of the evolving modern workplace.”

Microsoft Teams is reportedly testing a new design that merges the app's channels and text chat into one user interface, a lot like Slack. This could potentially streamline text communication for organizations and businesses, as The Verge's Tom Warren mentioned in his Notebook newsletter post.

The newsletter mentioned that Microsoft is currently testing a change combining the text chat and channels into one UI. An internal Microsoft message said: "Our new experience brings chats and channels together to get you to what matters faster."

Read more
The best Mac apps for 2024: top software for your Mac
The app store open on a MacBook Pro.

If there's one thing macOS is known for, it's a thriving ecosystem of unique, high-quality apps. Whether you're looking for something to boost your productivity, increase your security, edit your photos and videos, or dive into the world of AI chatbots, you're bound to find some great options, either in the App Store or elsewhere on the web.
Best Mac apps to change your interface
Alfred

Think of Alfred as Spotlight with a dash of Siri. It's an application launcher, but it can do a lot more than just that. With Alfred, you can quickly perform calculations, execute web searches, and find word definitions, among many other functions.

Read more
How to use Microsoft Teams
how to change your background in microsoft teams

Learning how to use Microsoft Teams properly can save you heaps of time. It has a built-in whiteboard, video chat functionality, team organization tools, and integrates well with the Microsoft 365 productivity cloud and its suite of useful applications.

Read more