Microsoft Launched Bing Chat Enterprise, a business-focused version of Bing Chat, during its Inspire conference. Bing conversation Enterprise doesn’t save conversation data, Microsoft can’t see customer employee or business data, and customer data isn’t utilized to train AI models.
“We’ve heard from many corporate customers who are excited to empower their organizations with powerful new AI tools but are concerned that their companies’ data will not be protected,” Microsoft’s chief communications officer Frank X. Shaw wrote in a TechCrunch blog post. “[Using Bing Chat Enterprise], what goes in—and comes out—remains protected, giving commercial customers managed access to better answers, greater efficiency, and new ways to be creative.”
To Shaw’s point, organizations worry about confidential data going to developers who educated chatbots like Bing Chat on user data. Following Samsung, Walmart, Verizon, Bank of America, JPMorgan, and others, Apple limited internal use of OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Microsoft-owned GitHub’s Copilot.
Cyberhaven found that 6.5% of employees pasted firm data into ChatGPT and 3.1% pasted sensitive info.
Bing Chat Enterprise Launched is available in preview today, answers queries in text, charts, and photos like Bing Chat, but with data restrictions. An employee can use Bing Chat Enterprise to develop message for a new product or compare it to a competitor, including confidential details like product specs and pricing.

Bing Chat Enterprise will soon be able to answer image inquiries and find similar content using Visual Search. Bing Chat on mobile and web launched Visual Search today.
In a blog post, Microsoft consumer chief marketing officer Yusuf Mehdi and CVP of contemporary work and business apps Jared Spataro describe Visual Search:
Visual Search allows users upload photographs and search for related articles. Take a picture or utilize one you discover elsewhere and ask Bing about it—Bing can grasp the context of an image, analyze it, and answer questions about it.”
Bing Chat Enterprise works on Bing.com/chat, the Microsoft Edge sidebar, and shortly Windows Copilot, the Windows-native version of Bing Chat. Microsoft 365 E3, E5, Business Standard, and Business Premium subscribers get it for free, and it will be sold separately for $5 per user per month.
Employees that log onto Bing with their organization’s Microsoft Account instantly enable Bing Chat Enterprise.
Read Also;OpenAI, creator of ChatGPT, casts spell on Microsoft
Viral AI-powered chatbots like Bing Chat must be monetized. OpenAI spent tens of millions of dollars processing ChatGPT’s millions of January prompts. Financial analysts predict that OpenAI’s GPT-4 model-powered Bing Chat requires at least $4 billion in infrastructure to serve all Bing users.
Bing Chat Enterprise launches several months after Microsoft-owned GitHub launched Copilot for Business, a $19-per-month enterprise version of the AI-powered code completion tool. OpenAI launched ChatGPT Plus, a subscription service with priority access to new features and upgrades.
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