Copilot is ‘For Entertainment Purposes Only,’ According To Microsoft’s Terms Of Service
Microsoft Copilot's terms label it "for entertainment purposes only." Find out what this really means for users and how other AI tools compare.
Matilda
Copilot is ‘For Entertainment Purposes Only,’ According To Microsoft’s Terms Of Service
Microsoft Copilot Called "Entertainment Only" — Here's What It Really Means Microsoft Copilot, one of the most widely used AI assistants in the world, has been quietly labeled "for entertainment purposes only" in its own terms of use. If you rely on Copilot for work, research, or decision-making, this revelation raises serious questions — and it is sparking a much bigger conversation about how much you can actually trust any AI tool. What Microsoft's Terms of Use Actually Say About Copilot
Buried in Copilot's terms of use, last updated on October 24, 2025, is a warning that has been making rounds on social media and turning heads across the tech world. The language reads plainly: Copilot is for entertainment purposes only, it can make mistakes, and it may not work as intended. Users are told not to rely on it for important advice and to use it entirely at their own risk. For a product that Microsoft has been aggressively pitching to corporate clients as a …