The tech company has made Copilot part of its 365 subscription service in several markets and raised prices.
So, when all else fails, why not literally pay people money out the wazoo to use your product? It's certainly not everyday that Microsoft does a giveaway this big. Either it's that desperate ...
The price of the Microsoft 365 service is going up in some parts of the world due to the inclusion of the Copilot AI ...
Microsoft will pay $20m (£16m) to US federal regulators after it was found to have illegally collected data on children who had started Xbox accounts. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC ...
In a regulatory filing, Microsoft says that it and the IRS are in for a long, multi-year negotiation and appeals process over $29.8 billion in additional tax payments plus interest and penalties ...
For MSFT, this paints a solid picture of a company that wants to pay a regular dividend, but recognizes that is not the main attraction to shareholders. Microsoft may be a very mature business ...
The free ride is over—the warning includes a stark reminder that to protect their PCs those users need to pay. “Starting in October 2025,” the latest set of nag warns, “Microsoft will no ...
Microsoft MSFT-1.73%decrease; red down pointing triangle is trying a new approach to build excitement for its artificial-intelligence assistant Copilot: Give it to customers whether they want it ...
Along with the AI feature, it raised prices for everyone who uses the service, called Microsoft 365, in those countries. What about people who don’t want to pay for an AI assistant to spruce up ...