first party surfaces

About this tag
The tag 'first party surfaces' on WindowsForum.com covers Microsoft's strategic shift toward proprietary, vendor-controlled platforms for its AI assistant Copilot. Discussions focus on the removal of Copilot from WhatsApp by January 2026, highlighting how platform policies and infrastructure limits are driving AI assistants away from third-party messaging services. Users are directed to Microsoft's own surfaces—Windows, web, and mobile apps—for continued Copilot access. The tag explores the implications for consumers and businesses that relied on conversational AI within WhatsApp, emphasizing the move to authenticated, first-party environments. Recurring themes include platform regulation, distribution strategy, and the transition to Microsoft-controlled endpoints.
  1. Copilot Leaves WhatsApp: Why Platforms Regulate AI Bots and What Follows

    Microsoft’s decision to pull Copilot from WhatsApp after January 15, 2026 marks a clear turning point in how major platforms are regulating access to conversational AI inside dominant messaging services, and it forces a rapid migration away from low‑friction, contact‑based chatbots toward...
  2. Copilot Drops WhatsApp by January 2026: Migration to Web, Mobile, and Windows

    Microsoft’s decision to pull Copilot off WhatsApp is the latest and most visible sign that the era of distributing full‑featured large language model (LLM) assistants inside third‑party messaging platforms is colliding with platform policy, infrastructure limits, and emerging regulatory caution...