Microsoft
appears
to
be
stepping
back
from
charging
Microsoft
365
Personal
and
Home
subscribers
another
$20
per
month
to
get
access
to
AI-powered
Office
features.
The
software
giant
quietly
announced
it’s
making
Copilot
Pro
features
part
of
its
Microsoft
365
Personal
and
Family
subscriptions
last
week,
but
only
in
Australia,
New
Zealand,
Malaysia,
Singapore,
Taiwan,
and
Thailand
for
now.
“It’s
been
nine
months
since
we
introduced
consumers
to
Copilot
in
our
Microsoft
365
apps
via
Copilot
Pro.
We’ve
spent
that
time
adding
new
features,
improving
performance,
and
listening
carefully
to
customer
feedback,”
says
Microsoft
in
a
press
release
spotted
by
ZDNet.
“Based
on
that
feedback,
we’re
making
Copilot
part
of
our
Microsoft
365
Personal
and
Family
subscriptions.”
Microsoft
is
also
adding
its
Microsoft
Designer
app
to
Microsoft
365
Personal
and
Family
subscriptions
in
these
select
markets.
“Microsoft
365
Personal
and
Family
subscribers
will
receive
a
monthly
allotment
of
AI
credits
to
use
Copilot
in
Word,
Excel,
PowerPoint,
Outlook,
OneNote,
and
Designer,”
explains
Microsoft.
“The
credits
will
also
apply
to
apps
like
Paint,
Photos,
and
Notepad
on
Windows.”
If
you
have
a
Microsoft
365
Family
subscription
in
one
of
these
select
markets,
only
the
subscription
owner
will
get
access
to
Copilot
and
it
cannot
be
shared
with
other
family
members.
While
some
Microsoft
365
Personal
and
Family
subscribers
are
getting
more
for
their
monthly
subscription,
prices
are
going
up
in
exchange
for
Microsoft
rolling
in
Copilot
Pro.
“To
reflect
the
value
we’ve
added
over
the
past
decade
and
enable
us
to
deliver
new
innovations
for
years
to
come,
we’re
increasing
the
prices
of
Microsoft
365
Personal
and
Family,”
says
Microsoft.
“The
price
increase
will
apply
to
existing
subscribers
upon
their
next
renewal.”
The
price
increases
vary
across
Australia,
New
Zealand,
Malaysia,
Singapore,
Taiwan,
and
Thailand.
In
Australia,
for
example,
Microsoft
has
increased
Microsoft
365
Family
subscriptions
by
$4
AUD
per
month,
and
Personal
subscriptions
by
$5
AUD.
That’s
a
lot
less
than
the
$33
AUD
Microsoft
wanted
for
Copilot
Pro
in
Australia
previously.
Microsoft
has
carefully
selected
markets
here
for
what
looks
like
a
trial
for
price
increases
to
Microsoft
365
Personal
and
Family
that
will
eventually
hit
US
and
European
markets.
Either
way,
it’s
clear
that
Microsoft’s
Copilot
Pro
experiment
hasn’t
worked
out.
A
$20
monthly
subscription
on
top
of
the
Microsoft
365
Personal
or
Home
subscription
was
always
a
big
ask,
and
when
I
tried
the
service
earlier
this
year
I
didn’t
think
it
was
worth
paying
$20
a
month
for.
I’ve
asked
Microsoft
to
comment
on
whether
these
Copilot
changes
will
appear
for
Microsoft
365
Home
and
Family
subscribers
in
the
US,
and
why
the
company
has
only
selected
these
markets.
Microsoft
didn’t
respond
in
time
for
publication.
(Originally posted by Tom Warren)
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