Description
Anthony Diana and Karim Alhassan are joined by Lighthouse’s John Collins to discuss Microsoft's AI-driven productivity tool, Copilot.
This episode presents an overview of Copilot and its various use cases, the technical nuances and details differentiating it from other generative AI tools, the identified compliance gaps and challenges currently seen in production, and the various risks legal departments should be aware of and accounting for.
This episode also provides a high-level overview of best practices that legal and business teams should consider as they continue to explore, pilot and roll out Copilot, including enhanced access controls, testing and user-training, which our speakers will further expand upon in future episodes.
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Transcript:
Intro: Hello and welcome to Tech Law Talks, a podcast brought to you by Reed Smith's Emerging Technologies Group. In each episode of this podcast, we will discuss cutting edge issues on technology, data, and the law. We will provide practical observations on a wide variety of technology and data topics to give you quick and actionable tips to address the issues you are dealing with every day.
Anthony: Hello, this is Anthony Diana, a partner here in the Emerging Technologies Group at Reed Smith. Welcome to Tech Law Talks. Today will be the first part of a series with Lighthouse focusing on what legal departments need to know about Copilot, Microsoft's new artificial intelligence tool. With me today are John Collins from Lighthouse and Karim Alhassan from Reed Smith. Thanks guys for joining. So today, we really just want to give legal departments sort of at a very high level what they need to know about Copilot. As we know Copilot was just introduced, I guess like last fall, maybe November of last year by Microsoft. It has been in preview and the like and then a lot of a lot of organizations are at least contemplating the use of Copilot or some of them, I've, I've heard have already launched Copilot without the legal departments knowing which is an issue in of itself. So today, we just want to give a high level view of what Copilot is, what it does at a really high level. And then what are the things that legal department should be thinking about in terms of risks that they have to manage when launching Copilot? This will be of a high level of additional series, which will be a little bit more practical in terms of what legal department should actually be doing. So today is just sort of highlighting what the risks are and what you should be thinking about. So with that John, I'll start with you. Can you just give a very high level preview of what, what is Copilot that's being launched?
John: Sure, thanks Anthony for having me. So Copilot for M365 which is what we're talking about is Microsoft's flagship Generative AI product. And the best way to think about it is it's Microsoft which has a partnership with open AI is taken the ubiquitous ChatGPT and they've brought it into the Microsoft ecosystem. They've integrated it with all the different Microsoft applications that business people use like Word Excel, powerpoint and teams. And you can ask Copilot to draft a document for you to summarize a document for you. So again, the best way, think about it is that it's taking that generative AI technology that everyone is familiar with, with ChatGPT and bringing it into the Microsoft ecosystem and leveraging a number of other Microsoft technologies within the Microsoft environment to make this kind of a platform available to the business people.
Anthony: Yeah. And I think, you know, I think from at least from what Microsoft is saying and I think a lot of our clients are saying that this is, this is groundbreaking, this is going to be and frankly, it's probably going to be the largest and most influential AI tool Enterprise has because Microsoft is ubiquitous, right? Like all your data is flowing through there. So using AI in this way, should provide tons of productivit
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