Microsoft’s Copilot has quietly begun ingesting usage signals from other Microsoft products — including Edge, Bing, and MSN — and the setting that permits this cross‑product data flow appears to be enabled by default for many users, creating a privacy decision point that every Windows user...
Microsoft quietly flipped a switch that lets Copilot pull activity signals from other Microsoft services — Edge, Bing, MSN and “other Microsoft products you’ve used” — and left that switch turned on for many users by default, creating a privacy decision some people never knew they were making...
Microsoft’s Copilot has quietly begun pulling usage signals from other Microsoft services — including Bing, MSN and Edge — to feed its Memory and personalization features, and that change is enabled by default for many users unless they actively switch it off.
This isn’t a new Copilot capability...
Microsoft’s Copilot has quietly widened the scope of what it can remember about you: the assistant can now draw on activity signals from other Microsoft services — explicitly calling out Edge, Bing and MSN — to personalize responses via its Memory feature, and that sharing appears to be enabled...
copilot memory
copilot privacy
crossproduct data
crossproductsignals
data personalization
edge browsing data
enterprise privacy
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microsoft usage data
opt-out
privacy controls