Microsoft is baking even more Copilot functionality into the Edge browser

Alfonso Maruccia

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In brief: Microsoft is retiring "Copilot Mode," as chatbot functionality is being more tightly integrated into Edge on both desktop and mobile devices. The browser now incorporates a range of Copilot features designed to assist users, including AI-powered summarization and task support. However, these capabilities also rely on access to browsing data, which may include information from both current sessions and past activity, depending on user permissions and settings.

The newly announced changes focus on expanding Copilot's ability to make web browsing more seamless for users. Microsoft has recently indicated it is scaling back broader Copilot integration in Windows 11, but Edge remains the primary platform for deeper AI-powered browser features.

First, Microsoft said that several Copilot features already available on desktop are being extended to Edge on mobile as well. These updates include the chatbot's ability to "reason" across all open tabs, allowing it to answer questions based on content currently being viewed in the browser. Copilot can also compare information, surface answers, and assist with tasks such as trip planning, Microsoft said.

Previously available only on Edge desktop, the "Journeys" feature is now rolling out to the browser's mobile version as well. The feature can provide summaries and suggest next steps for various activities, including turning browsing history into "meaningful topics."

In addition, the "Vision and Voice" feature enables more natural interaction with Copilot by using visual input and voice, allowing users to ask questions aloud while the system interprets what is on screen. Edge also features a redesigned "new tab" page, with a more streamlined interface and multiple starting points, including chat, search, and browse modes.

Edge's renewed reliance on Copilot is also introducing new tools for productivity, including a "Study and Learn" mode designed to simplify, summarize, and even gamify complex topics. For example, AI-generated quizzes aim to help users reinforce learning and improve long-term recall. Copilot's Writing Assistant can also generate drafts and rewrite content, significantly reducing the need for manual input.

Microsoft emphasizes that Edge users can choose which chatbot features to enable or disable from the outset. The company repeatedly states in its announcement that all AI-driven actions and data usage are performed "with your permission." However, critics note concerns about how these permissions are presented and managed in practice.

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Good.
Copilot is the greatest thing ever and we totally need more of it.
I'm hoping it will eventually replace all of Windows so I can sit back fulltime and watch TV shows or movies or read books and never even turn on my PC anymore.
Joking.
If all goes as planned I'll be off Windows soon.
Microshenanigans can go take a hike. Traitors.
 
This may seem wierd but hear me out, our school lets us use chrome on our laptops but I use bing in chrome for the rewards points, still use google on my main rig tho.
 
MS nearly went a whole week without shoving copilot anywhere new. I knew it couldn't last.
Nobody wants it. When will they take the hint? How much market share do they have to lose before they start actually doing what they say and listening to their customers?
 
Edge is such a POS and every time it updates it nags me to make it the default browser and occasionally just does it on it's own without permission.
 
edge is really good if u remove all the msn feed and other bloat idk why people hate it

Yes, I've got to agree. I use Firefox, but Edge has replaced Chrome as an alternative. With customisation, in the settings, nothing else, it is a minimal browser, looks nice, and there is no Copilot in sight, except for the search bar on the new tab page. Also, fully-fledged uBlock Origin.

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edge is really good if u remove all the msn feed and other bloat idk why people hate it
Because you have to do that in order to make it good.

I suspect that other than waterfox users, no one yet knows that waterfox incorporated its own ad blocking. And I don't have to configure it to kill any unwanted AI features.

M$ can take a flying crap, IMO.
 
So Microsoft is giving us all more reasons to avoid Edge? Yay! Suck poo Microsoft!
 
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