Instagram Ai
The latest Instagram Ai coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
Microsoft’s Copilot Compliance Engine: What EY’s Peek Inside Reveals
A new EY case study reveals Microsoft’s internal governance system for AI features like Copilot, using over 500 automated controls to meet 80+ frameworks. The report doesn’t change tenant settings but demonstrates a compliance-by-design approach that can help admins justify Copilot adoption to security teams. Organizations should still treat rollout as a governance project.
How Boko Haram Fighters Bypassed AI Safety Filters Across ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini
A Cambridge University study reveals Boko Haram insurgents used ChatGPT, Claude, and other AI chatbots to plan attacks and build explosives, bypassing safety filters through disguise and multi-model comparison. The report provides field evidence of operational AI misuse, urging Windows users and IT admins to tighten AI access controls and governance.
Instagram Will Eventually Charge for Heavy AI Use, Mosseri Confirms — What We Know So Far
Instagram chief Adam Mosseri has confirmed that the platform will eventually introduce a paid subscription for heavier usage of its generative AI tools, which currently have daily free caps. The change isn't immediate, but casual users will likely remain free while power users, creators, and businesses will need to pay.
Studio-Trained AI Generates 200 Anime Frames in Minutes—Without Copyright Risk
CrestLab's ANICRA platform is being tested in Japanese anime studios, automating in-between frame generation with unprecedented speed while avoiding legal pitfalls by training only on studio-provided data. The tool raises questions about efficiency versus junior animator training, and for IT teams, demands careful workflow governance.
Samsung Races to Open AI Memory Fab by 2029—Here’s What It Means for Your Next PC Build
Samsung is fast-tracking its first Yongin semiconductor fab to begin operations in 2029, one to two years earlier than planned, driven by relentless AI memory demand. While the move signals long-term confidence in the AI infrastructure boom, Windows PC builders and IT pros shouldn’t expect near-term price relief—the fab won’t meaningfully affect the consumer market until at least 2030, and the intervening years may see continued supply tightness.
Samsung Races to Open Yongin Chip Plant by 2029, Two Years Ahead of Schedule
Samsung has moved up the target for its first Yongin semiconductor fab to 2029, accelerating a massive capacity expansion by one to two years. The shift signals that Samsung expects sustained chip demand from AI and computing infrastructure, though the timeline depends on critical power and water projects. For Windows and IT buyers, the move offers a long-range cue that memory and storage supply could improve in the early 2030s.
How to Control GPT-5.6 in Microsoft 365 Copilot Before the July 24 Mandatory Enablement
Microsoft is rolling out GPT-5.6 as the preferred model in Microsoft 365 Copilot, but the move also makes OpenAI a subprocessor, shifting data processing flows. A new admin setting controls access, and unless explicitly blocked, GPT-5.6 will be enabled for all eligible commercial users on July 24, 2026. This analysis explains what the change means for end users and IT teams, the compliance gaps to check, and how to configure the setting before the deadline.
What India’s AI Push in Hyderabad Means for Windows IT Teams
India’s technology minister has urged Hyderabad’s IT sector to pivot from outsourcing to AI services, a move that could reshape the skills available from the city’s engineering workforce. For Windows IT teams relying on offshore partners, this signals a coming shift toward Azure AI talent and a potential tightening of traditional maintenance skills.
Samsung and SK hynix Plan Four New Memory Fabs in Korea—What It Means for Your PC and AI Future
Samsung and SK hynix plan to build four new memory fabs in South Korea's Gwangju region, part of an $570 billion corporate investment push. A local institute is angling to develop AI chip technologies, but the real impact on memory supply and PC hardware is still years away.
Microsoft's SharePoint AI Page Creator Is Coming: How to Stop a Prompt-Fueled Content Flood
Microsoft's AI page creation tool for SharePoint, due in preview by March 2026 and full release in August 2026, will let users build and edit pages through a chat pane. Without publishing controls, IT teams risk a flood of unvetted, authoritative-looking content that could seep into Copilot answers. This article outlines six practical steps administrators can take now to govern AI-generated pages before the rollout.
OpenAI Dissolves Independent Safety Oversight: What Windows Users Need to Know
OpenAI is eliminating its independent safety oversight function and embedding it within the research division, prompting the departure of sixth safety leader Johannes Heidecke. This article breaks down what the restructuring means for home users, IT admins, and developers—while offering practical steps to manage the governance shift.
OpenAI's Codex Desktop App Lands on Windows—Here's What You Can Actually Do With It
OpenAI's Codex desktop app arrived on Windows on March 4, 2026, letting developers run multi-agent coding tasks in isolated worktrees. The article details what the app can do, plan availability, data privacy controls, and a practical setup checklist for individual devs and IT admins.
OpenAI Cancels Atlas Browser for Windows, Shifts AI to ChatGPT Desktop
OpenAI will shut down its Atlas browser on August 9, 2026, less than a year after launching exclusively on macOS. The promised Windows version never materialized. Atlas’s AI browsing capabilities are migrating into the ChatGPT desktop app and a Chrome extension, meaning Windows users can access them without a standalone browser. Existing Atlas users must manually export bookmarks, passwords, and other data before the deadline as nothing transfers automatically. The shutdown also moves prompt injection risks into the new ChatGPT Work platform, where the potential attack surface is larger due to broader agent permissions.