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Microsoft may have found a sneaky way to promote Copilot. The iPhone App Storeâs changelog for apps like the OneDrive app now shows âgenerated using Copilotâ at the bottom of the notes, which is not explicitly required by Apple, hinting that this might be a subtle way of promoting Copilot.
This isnât new, as the company has been adding â*These notes were generated using Copilotâ at the end of every changelog from May 13, 2025. It was only spotted by Windows Latest today. However, we didnât see this treatment under the changelog version history for most Microsoft apps on the App Store for iPhone.
Also, the changelog in the OneDrive app for Mac doesnât have any mention of being generated by Copilot, despite being pretty detailed. The Play Store in Android phones does not show version history, so we are not sure if this is just for the iOS apps like OneDrive or if Microsoft edited all the changelogs but missed the one for OneDrive
With that said, iOS sure does lack a powerful and feature-packed AI, and Copilot is going to need all the attention that it can get in order to have a meaningful market share among others like ChatGPT, Gemini, and even Perplexity.
Microsoft has been fairly vocal about using AI to write code for some of the software that the company makes. Now it seems that one of Microsoftâs own teams may be experimenting with Copilot for a much simpler job, which is writing release notes for the OneDrive iOS app.
In the App Storeâs changelog, some updates include the line â*These notes were generated using Copilotâ at the bottom of the notes. Thatâs a bit funny when you think about it. An AI writing about fixes and features coded by the same AI (well, at least 30%, if Satya Nadellaâs words are to be believed).

But itâs also interesting because Appleâs App Store guidelines do not require developers to disclose how they write their release notes, so this line feels like a deliberate choice from Microsoft.
Windows Latest noticed that this Copilot credit doesnât show up on every patch. In our checks, smaller bug-fix updates donât include the Copilot line, but more substantial updates do. If this were a mistake or an automatic template, it would be everywhere.

This makes sense when you look at Copilotâs actual market position. Copilot isnât conquering the generative AI world in raw user numbers the way ChatGPT does. Internally, Microsoft has doubled down on Copilot with big investments in OpenAI.
So maybe itâs not wild speculation to wonder if teams are encouraged to use Copilot internally, if only to generate release notes or get more usage telemetry.
Changelogs are low-risk content. Nobody expects poetic writing or deep technical accuracy there. At the same time, they are highly visible. Every update pushes that text in front of millions of users. If Microsoft wants to normalize the Copilot name without forcing it into usersâ faces, this is a safe place to do it.
Apple does not yet have a first-party, AI chatbot that rivals Copilot, Gemini, or ChatGPT. Siri doesnât count based on how well (or worse) it performs now. Apple Intelligence is tightly scoped and still rolling out in stages. That leaves iOS apps as one of the few places where an AI can be promoted without Apple controlling the narrative.
App Store changelogs are also one of the few user-facing text surfaces that Apple does not heavily editorialize or restrict. So, if Microsoft gets some users to try to use Copilot, it’s a win for the company.
If anything, this may be one of the earliest visible signs of AI-generated content becoming the default.
Would you take AI-generated changelogs as seriously as human-written ones?
The post Microsoftâs iPhone apps are quietly doing free Copilot promotion using Apple App Store Release Notes appeared first on Windows Latest
In this post, we explore what dialogue should do and how to write it â with examples. Weâve created a quick start guide to writing dialogue.
Read the other posts in our Quick Start series:
The first piece of advice a new writer is always given is to make their dialogue sound realistic. This is so wrong itâs frightening.
Have you ever sat in a coffee shop and listened to people talking? They jump like fleas from one topic to another. Every sentence has ‘um’, ‘er’, long pauses, inane conversation about the weather, minutes of ‘hi how are you’, ‘howâs the family’, ‘howâs work’, etc. No one wants pages of that. What they do want is dialogue that sounds natural.
Bad dialogue sounds stilted. The best way to decide if youâve written bad dialogue is to read it to someone else. If you find yourself tripping over words, missing words etc, then itâs bad dialogue. Great dialogue takes almost forensic observation of how people talk, not necessarily what they talk about. It also takes practice. Lots of practice.
However, if you have âsaid Johnâ, âsaid Maryâ after every line, that becomes boring and interferes with the story.
If youâd like to learn how to write great dialogue, sign up for one of the rich and in-depth workbooks and courses that Writers Write offers and get your dialogue off to a great start.

by Elaine Dodge. Author of The Harcourts of Canada series and The Device Hunter, Elaine trained as a graphic designer, then worked in design, advertising, and broadcast television. She now creates content, mostly in written form, including ghost writing business books, for clients across the globe, but would much rather be drafting her books and short stories.
Top Tip: Find out more about our workbooks and online courses in our shop.
The post A Quick Start Guide To Writing Dialogue appeared first on Writers Write.
Grok's track record is spotty at best. But even by the very low standards of xAI, its failure in the aftermath of the tragic mass shooting at Bondi Beach in Australia is shocking. The AI chatbot has repeatedly misidentified 43-year-old Ahmed al Ahmed, the man who heroically disarmed one of the shooters, and claimed the verified video of his deed was something else entirely - including that it was an old viral video of a man climbing a tree.
In the aftermath of the attack, Ahmed has been widely praised for his heroism, but some have tried to dismiss or even deny his actions. Someone even quickly whipped up a fake news site that appears to be âŚ
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.