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Microsoft removes Copilot buttons from Windows 11 applications

Microsoft is removing Copilot buttons from standard Windows 11 applications. In Notepad, the button has been replaced with a 'writing tools' menu; in…

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Microsoft removes Copilot buttons from Windows 11 applications
Source: The Verge. Collage: Hamidun News.
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Microsoft has started removing Copilot buttons from standard Windows 11 applications — the company calls them 'unnecessary entry points' and is systematically eliminating them as part of a large-scale plan to improve the system. Notepad and Snipping Tool were the first to fall under the knife. In the latest build for Windows Insiders program participants, the Copilot button in Notepad has been replaced with a 'writing tools' menu. In Snipping Tool, it has disappeared entirely: when selecting an area for screenshot capture, the button no longer appears.

Photos and Widgets applications are next in line. Microsoft announced these changes as part of the 'Windows 11 Improvement Plan' published earlier this year. The document includes specific commitments: improve performance, reduce the number of intrusive interface elements, and make the system more predictable for users overall.

Removing Copilot buttons is one of the first visible results of these commitments.

An important nuance: it is the buttons themselves that are being removed, not the AI capabilities. Artificial intelligence-based features in applications will not disappear — access to them will simply become less aggressive. This is a fundamental distinction: Microsoft is not abandoning AI integration in Windows, but rather reconsidering how it is presented to users.

Context matters. Over the past two years, Microsoft has actively embedded Copilot virtually everywhere — from the taskbar to individual system applications. User reaction has been mixed: many perceived the buttons as imposed baggage rather than a useful tool.

The Recall function sparked a separate wave of criticism — it was supposed to take screenshots every few seconds but its launch was delayed due to privacy concerns.

The situation is indicative of a broader trend. After years of aggressive promotion of AI interfaces, major tech companies are beginning to realize that pushiness works against technology adoption. Users are more willing to use AI when they seek it out themselves, rather than when it pushes itself onto the screen.

Microsoft, apparently, is drawing this very conclusion — and is beginning to remove what annoyed users while preserving what actually works.

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