A busy few days by Microsoft meant the death of Skype wasn't even the biggest news story this week.
It has been quite the week for Microsoft. The tech giant announced the end of Skype, confirmed the use of AI to generate content in Call of Duty, and began testing a free version of Office that contains ads. Microsoft Copilot also helped people pirate Windows 11 for a brief time, though the AI tool will no longer provide a guide on that when asked.
Farewell Skype
Skype users have until May to migrate to Teams or another service.
(Image credit: Future)
Skype will shut down in just over two months. Microsoft confirmed the May 5, 2025 cutoff date shortly after reports emerged that showed the upcoming end of Skype before Microsoft intended to share it.
Skype launched in 2003 and was an extremely popular platform for video calls and messaging. Microsoft purchased Skype in 2011 for $8.5 billion.
Throughout the 14 years Skype has been part of Microsoft, the platform has struggled to remain relevant. Multiple app rewrites and a shift in focus could not help Skype compete with Zoom, WhatsApp, iMessage, and other platforms.
Microsoft also shifted its focus to Teams years ago, leaving the writing on the wall regarding Skype.
AI in Call of Duty
Certain in-game rewards within Call of Duty: black Ops 6 and Warzone made people suspect Activision was
using AI to generate content.
(Image credit: Windows Central)
Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 and Warzone both contain AI-generated content. Many have suspected as much for months, but Activision confirmed the fact this past week.
A zombie Santa with six fingers was just one piece of content that flagged up the possible use of AI within the Call of Duty games.
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