Microsoft threatens to hold down Bing search data access to AI chatbot challengers

 Microsoft feels that using their hunt data to train rival AI chatbots is a violation of the contract and the company holds all the rights to terminate the agreement in case it finds one violating it.   

Microsoft is  enhancing its  contest by demanding its challengers to stop using Bing’s hunt  indicator to power their AI chatbots. According to a Bloomberg report, the Redmond- giant, without  telling the names, has advised two Bing- powered hunt machines that it'll  enjoin their access to Microsoft’s hunt data in they use it to power their AI tools.   

While Microsoft has not named in any company in particular, the company licenses out its Bing’s hunt data to several hunt machines like DuckDuckGo and Yahoo. According to the report, Microsoft feels that using their hunt data to train rival AI chatbots is a violation of the contract and the company holds all the rights to terminate the agreement in case it finds one violating it.   

“ We ’ve been in touch with  mates who are out of compliance as we continue to  constantly  apply our terms across the board, ” the company was quoted by Bloomberg adding that it'll continue “ to work with them directly and  give any information  demanded to find a path forward. ”   

While it's unclear which companies have exactly been advised by Microsoft, The Verge highlights that search machines DuckDuckGo andYou.com have launched AI products of their own. DuckDuckGo’s DuckAssist

image source: pixabay

is a new AI tool that  respects its hunt machine’s Instant Answer  point by pulling small AI- generated content from web.You.com has YouWrite- an AI writing adjunct to help write content, blogs, emails and  further. 

With AI war hotting up, it's accessible that Microsoft would want to make its hunt data exclusive to Bing AI.   In a affiliated news, Microsoft  lately added powers of  textbook- fed image generation to its Bing hunt called Bing Image Creator. This new AI tool  principally allows  druggies to  induce images using words they enter to describe the image they want to see. This tool is powered by OpenAI’s image generation tool DALL-E. 

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