Microsoft taps Anthropic for Copilot Cowork in push for AI agents
The Hindu
The move deepens Microsoft’s ties with Anthropic at a time when investors have questioned its dependence on OpenAI
Microsoft is adding Anthropic’s AI technology to its Copilot service to tap growing demand for autonomous agents, weeks after the startup’s new tools sparked a selloff in software stocks.
The company on Monday unveiled Copilot Cowork, a tool based on Anthropic’s viral Claude Cowork offering, which has captivated Silicon Valley with its ability to handle complex tasks such as creating apps, building spreadsheets and organising large volumes of data with limited human oversight.
Microsoft is betting that its long-standing ties with enterprise customers and its focus on security and data controls will help it win business from companies interested in AI agents but wary of deploying them without safeguards.
“We work only in a cloud environment and we work only on behalf of the user. So you know exactly what information it (Copilot Cowork) has access to,” Jared Spataro, who leads Microsoft’s AI-at-Work efforts, told Reuters.
Cloud Cowork only works locally on the device and most companies feel “very uncomfortable” with that, he said. “We’re the opposite.”
The launch comes weeks after Anthropic introduced new tools for Claude that intensified investor concerns about the threat AI agents could pose to traditional software companies, triggering to a selloff in the sector. Microsoft’s own shares fell nearly 9% in February.

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