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In the race to get more out of AI, big tech companies are making rapid advances and then big steps back.
Microsoft became the latest company to scale back its artificial intelligence capabilities within a month of announcing them amid backlash.
Microsoft on Thursday Retracting AI tools The company released the feature through a new line of computers called Copilot+ PC. The feature was expected to be broadly available to Copilot+ PC users on June 18, but now it will only be available to a small number of users who are part of the Windows Insider program.
The AI feature is called “Recall,” and it works like a computer’s “photographic memory” — taking screenshots of everything you see on your PC and helping you quickly find where you saved something via a conversation prompt.
But privacy activists quickly raised the alarm about Microsoft’s recall feature, bashing the idea of a device being able to take screenshots of what you’re doing every few seconds.
Microsoft, meanwhile, said that users can turn off the feature and that images will only be stored internally within the company.
“We are leveraging the expertise of the Windows Insider community to align our release model for Recall to ensure that the experience meets our high standards for quality and security,” the company said. I have written in a blog post on Thursday.
Microsoft did not respond to Business Insider’s request for comment sent outside of normal business hours.
But big tech companies seem to have a tendency to rush ahead and quickly deploy AI capabilities, then reverse course when things go wrong.
Take for example the recent events at Google, Adobe and OpenAI: Granted, each company disclosed reasons for their retraction, but all had to reconsider their rollouts after release.
In May, Google scaled back its use of “AI Overviews,” the AI-generated answers that appear in search results, after the feature made some nasty errors, including advising users to “look for the wrong answer.” Add glue to pizza sauceFollowing the launch of Gemini Tools, Google stopped offering AI-generated facial images in February. Created images filled with historical inaccuracies.
“We’ve already delivered more than 10 technical updates to our system and are committed to continually improving when and how we show you AI summaries,” a Google representative told BI.
Also in May, OpenAI released a voice option called “Sky,” which is “eerily similar.” This infuriated actress Scarlett Johansson. The creators of ChatGPT said it was not Johansson’s voice, apologized, and subsequently removed the voiceover from the platform.
Earlier this week, Adobe joined the fray, asking users to re-agree to its “Terms of Use,” which led some to wonder if the AI would remove their work and content. Some Adobe employees questioned the company’s ability to communicate, and the company has since delayed rolling out the updated changes.
“This incident provides us with an opportunity to rethink the language we use in our Terms of Use, to be clearer and to address concerns raised by our community,” Adobe said in a blog post on Monday.
Representatives for Adobe and OpenAI did not respond to BI’s requests for comment sent outside regular business hours.