Remember when Microsoft promised that they are not taking pictures of your desktop and sending it to their servers? Even if Recall is supposed to keep everything on your computer, this is not the case for Copilot Vision, an extension of Recall that sends screenshots to Microsoft servers for optical processing.
You would need to manually turn Copilot Vision on thankfully. Nevertheless, I am still baffled at why would such integration be needed in the first place.
Copilot Vision is an extension of Microsoft’s divisive Recall, a feature initially sort of exclusive to the Copilot+ systems with a neural co-processor of sufficient computational power. Like Recall, which was pulled due to serious security failings and subject to a lengthy delay before its eventual relaunch, Copilot Vision is designed to analyze everything you do on your computer.
It does this, when enabled, by capturing constant screenshots and feeding them to an optical character recognition system and a large language model for analysis – but where Recall works locally, Copilot Vision sends the data off to Microsoft servers.
According to a Microsoft spokesperson back in April, users’ data will not be stored long-term, aside from transcripts of the conversation with the Copilot assistant itself, and “are not used for model training or ads personalisation.”