Gaming Copilot AI under fire, but Microsoft says it’s not training AI models on your data

Microsoft Gaming Copilot AI
(Image credit: Microsoft)

A week after Microsoft's Gaming Copilot feature stirred up controversy, the company has released a public statement about the AI tool addressing the backlash.

On Wednesday (Oct. 22), a member of the gaming forum ResetEra found that the new Gaming Copilot AI was sending screenshots and captures of everything they played to Microsoft. Allegedly, this data is being used to train the company's AI models.

"This installed automatically on my PC, and watching the network traffic I realized it was automatically sending everything I was doing to Microsoft," RedbullCola said in their ResetEra post. “I checked the settings, and by default, it’s set to train on text seen on the screen — it screenshots everything, and OCRs text from in-game and sends it to MS. MS then uses what you’re doing to train their AI models.”

Microsoft's defense

Microsoft 50th anniversary Copilot Home Screen

(Image credit: Microsoft)

Our colleagues at Tom's Hardware were told that Gaming Copilot does not send screensheets or data back to Microsoft.

"When you’re actively using Gaming Copilot in Game Bar, it can use screenshots of your gameplay to get a better understanding of what’s happening in your game and provide you with more helpful responses," a spokesperson told them.

They went on to say that the screenshots are not used to train AI models and that it's optional.

Despite that, the statement also said that Gaming Copilot might "use its text or voice conversations to help train and improve AI."

Your screenshots may not be used by Microsoft's AI, but your prompts could be. It's also unclear where this data is potentially going, either to a Microsoft external server or stored locally on your NPU.

How to find and toggle off Gaming Copilot

You can find Gaming Copilot by going to Game Bar, Settings and Privacy Settings. Under the Gaming Pilot section, it should read "Model training on text" by default.

You can turn if off in the Privacy settings section but unfortunately, there doesn't appear to be a way to uninstall it unless you uninstall the Xbox Game Bar. To do that you have to fiddle with PowerShell using admin privileges.

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Scott Younker
West Coast Reporter

Scott Younker is the West Coast Reporter at Tom’s Guide. He covers all the lastest tech news. He’s been involved in tech since 2011 at various outlets and is on an ongoing hunt to build the easiest to use home media system. When not writing about the latest devices, you are more than welcome to discuss board games or disc golf with him. He also handles all the Connections coverage on Tom's Guide and has been playing the addictive NYT game since it released.

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