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Accenture expands Microsoft Copilot to 743,000 staff

Accenture will deploy Microsoft Copilot 365 to all 743,000 employees, marking Microsoft’s largest enterprise Copilot rollout to date.

The expansion significantly strengthens Microsoft’s push to grow paid adoption of its $30-per-month AI assistant, which currently reaches only a small fraction of Microsoft 365’s enterprise base. The move builds on Accenture’s earlier deployment to 300,000 employees.

Accenture says internal surveys showed major efficiency gains, with 97% of participating employees reporting faster completion of routine tasks and over half citing substantial productivity improvements.

The agreement is a major validation for Microsoft as investors scrutinize returns on its AI investments, while Microsoft also broadens its enterprise AI ecosystem beyond OpenAI through expanded model offerings.

China forces Meta to unwind Manus AI deal

Meta is reportedly preparing to reverse its $2 billion-plus acquisition of AI startup Manus after Chinese regulators blocked the deal on national security grounds.

According to reports, Beijing ordered Meta to fully unwind the acquisition, restore Manus’s Chinese assets, and remove any transferred data or technology. Regulators have reportedly set a preliminary deadline of several weeks and may impose penalties if the reversal is incomplete.

Manus investors, including major Asian backers, are reportedly coordinating around the unwinding process, while some investors have already received returns.

The case reflects China’s growing scrutiny of foreign investment in domestic frontier AI firms, especially ahead of broader U.S.-China diplomatic negotiations.

OpenAI misses growth targets before IPO push

OpenAI has reportedly fallen short of internal revenue and user growth goals as it prepares for a potential IPO, according to the Wall Street Journal.

The report says ChatGPT user growth slowed late last year, missing a target of 1 billion weekly active users, while revenue also underperformed projections amid stronger competition from Anthropic in coding and enterprise AI markets.

CFO Sarah Friar reportedly raised concerns internally about whether slower growth could challenge OpenAI’s ability to sustain massive future data-center and computing commitments. Subscriber churn has also reportedly increased.

CEO Sam Altman and Friar publicly rejected suggestions of internal misalignment, stating the company remains focused on securing compute capacity and expanding aggressively.