Microsoft says the new Copilot app, mistakenly added to the list of installed Windows apps by recent Edge updates, doesn't collect or relay data to its servers.
The company began testing Microsoft Copilot in Windows Server 2025 preview builds earlier this year. However, after facing backlash from Windows admins, Microsoft removed Copilot from those builds.
For this reason, they were surprised to see a new 8KB Microsoft Copilot app added to the list of installed programs on live production builds of Windows Server 2022.
As the company revealed on Tuesday, this known issue also affected systems running Windows 10 22H2 and Windows 11 21H2 or later.
"Updates to Edge browser version 123.0.2420.65, released on March 28, 2024 and later, might incorrectly install a new package (MSIX) called 'Microsoft chat provider for Copilot in Windows' on Windows devices. Resulting from this, the Microsoft Copilot app might appear in the Installed apps in Settings menu," Redmond said.
Microsoft also says that the Copilot app these recent Edge updates add on impacted devices can't actually be used to launch Copilot and does not collect any user or system data.
"It is important to note that the Microsoft chat provider for Copilot in Windows does not execute any code or process, and does not acquire, analyze, or transmit device or environment data in any capacity," Microsoft explains.
The package is intended solely to prepare some Windows devices for future Windows Copilot enablement and will not be visible on all Windows devices.
Moreover, according to Microsoft, even if the installed component causes a Copilot app to display as installed on the system, it won't fully install or enable Windows Copilot.
"As part of the upcoming resolution of this issue, the chat provider for Copilot in Windows component will be removed from devices where Microsoft Copilot is not intended to be enabled or installed. This includes most Windows Server devices," Microsoft said.
"We are working on a resolution and will provide an update in an upcoming release of Microsoft Edge."
The company is now also testing ads in the Windows 11 Start menu as part of a new experiment to help users "discover great apps from the Microsoft Store."
This is part of a trial rolling out in the Beta Channel to a "small set of Insiders" who have installed Windows 11 Insider Preview Build 22635.3495.
Two years ago, Redmond promoted its Edge web browser in the Windows 10 Start Menu and accidentally broke both the Taskbar and the Start Menu while testing Microsoft Teams ads on some Windows Insider builds.
Comments
b1k3rdude - 2 months ago
Yeah, sure it dosent do any data collection and telemetry, Micro$haft.
Not a problem for me, as I force uninstall Edge when reinstalling windows.
Mahhn - 2 months ago
Trust of MS has never been lower. They get phowned by hacks every day, install software without permission, and OMG I've been using defender for business for a year and they are still based on csv and powershell as a back end. Can't even create report templates for any of the reports on things that matter. MS is a lost cause. Please someone make a replacement for everything MS.
DyingCrow - 2 months ago
"Mistakenly"... yes, of course. What could go wrong? M$ has been on a roll to be as obnoxiously disruptive and forceful as possible, really trying to see how far they can go with crap and then coming out with stupid excuses when they get backlash.
The monster only respects the money, NOT the poeople who give it the money and uses their products.
lwlopez1 - 2 months ago
Been in IT 40+ years. Had a client with 100% disk utilization.
Clean boot = not fixed
Virus/Malware scan = clean not fixed
Event viewer = clean
sfc /scannow=clean not fixed
chkdsk /r = clean not fixed
All roads are possible bad disk 100% disk problem not changing.
New user profile = clean not fixed.
No apps running. not fixed. (Edge was in processes and not opened to trigger it)
Finally CoPilot disabled in Edge=fixed.
Turned Co pilot back on= broke again 100% disk.
Conclusion = CoPilot is doing something to the computer.