Updated
Updated · Computerworld · Jul 2
Microsoft Adds Teams Controls to Block Third-Party AI Bots, Leaving Its Own Notetakers Untouched
Updated
Updated · Computerworld · Jul 2

Microsoft Adds Teams Controls to Block Third-Party AI Bots, Leaving Its Own Notetakers Untouched

3 articles · Updated · Computerworld · Jul 2

Summary

  • Teams can now force suspected non-Microsoft notetaker bots into the lobby for organizer approval, even when human participants are allowed to bypass it.
  • Microsoft said the feature uses behavioral and infrastructure signals to better distinguish bots from people, and it plans a registration path for independent software vendors building Teams meeting tools.
  • Analysts said the control helps enterprise IT but stops short of true governance because it targets external bots, not Microsoft’s own tools, and still relies on ad hoc organizer approval.
  • Experts warned the bigger risk is that meeting transcripts can capture M&A, legal or HR discussions, then spread through cloud systems, search and discovery as authoritative-looking records that may also be wrong.
  • That threat is expected to grow as AI notetakers evolve into agents that summarize meetings, assign tasks and update business systems, pushing companies toward identity-style controls for machine participants.

Insights

With AI in every meeting, who now controls your company's most sensitive data: IT leaders or any employee?
Microsoft’s new AI controls ignore its own bots. Who is liable when its AI hallucinates a false corporate record?