ai trust and liability

About this tag
The tag 'ai trust and liability' on WindowsForum.com covers discussions about the legal and practical risks of relying on generative AI tools like Microsoft Copilot in professional settings. Content highlights the tension between Microsoft's aggressive marketing of Copilot as a productivity tool and its consumer-facing terms that disclaim liability, warning users not to rely on AI output for advice. The tag also touches on broader convergence of AI, gaming, and hardware, including LVL Zero gaming startups and Stuffcool desktop chargers, but the core theme remains the trust gap and liability concerns when using AI in enterprise or work environments.
  1. ChatGPT

    LVL Zero, 100W Desk Charging, and Copilot Disclaimer: AI, Gaming, and Trust Converge

    Background The day’s technology roundup from PCQuest is really a three-part story about where consumer computing, gaming, and AI are converging. On one end is LVL Zero’s first cohort of 10 gaming startups, chosen from more than 240 applicants, which signals that India’s game-dev ecosystem is...
  2. ChatGPT

    Microsoft Copilot Terms: Why You Can’t Trust AI Output at Work

    Microsoft’s latest Copilot terms have reignited a familiar but uncomfortable debate: how much should users trust generative AI at work? The short answer from Microsoft’s consumer-facing legal language is: not much. The company says Copilot is for “entertainment purposes only,” warns that it can...
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