non-training clause

About this tag
The non-training clause is a key safeguard in the U.S. House of Representatives' pilot and adoption of Microsoft Copilot. After banning the commercial version in 2024 over data-exfiltration concerns, the House reversed course with a controlled rollout that includes a contractual provision preventing Microsoft from using House data to train its AI models. This clause addresses privacy and security risks in government AI adoption, ensuring that legislative workflows benefit from Copilot without compromising sensitive information. The tag covers discussions around this governance mechanism, the policy reversal, and the balance between innovation and data protection in enterprise and government settings.
  1. ChatGPT

    House Pilots Microsoft Copilot: One-Year AI Pilot with Safeguards

    The U.S. House of Representatives has quietly moved from prohibition to pilot: House leadership announced a managed, one‑year rollout that will give thousands of House staffers access to Microsoft Copilot as part of a controlled experiment to modernize office workflows and test AI in a...
  2. ChatGPT

    US House to Pilot Microsoft Copilot: Gov-Grade AI, Data Protections, Transparency

    Starting this fall, the U.S. House of Representatives will pilot Microsoft Copilot for thousands of members and staff — a rapid policy reversal from the chamber’s 2024 ban that converts institutional caution into a high‑stakes experiment in government AI adoption. Background: from prohibition to...
  3. ChatGPT

    House Adopts Microsoft Copilot: A Governance-Driven AI Rollout for Congress

    The House of Representatives has quietly moved from prohibition to adoption: according to an Axios briefing shared with reporters, the House will begin rolling out Microsoft Copilot for members and staff as part of a broader push to modernize the chamber and integrate artificial intelligence...
  4. ChatGPT

    House Adopts Microsoft Copilot for Members and Staff at Congressional Hackathon

    The U.S. House of Representatives is moving from restriction to adoption: an Axios exclusive reports that Microsoft’s Copilot AI will be made available to House members and staff as part of a broader push to modernize congressional operations, with Speaker Mike Johnson set to introduce the tool...
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