Difference between chatgpt and copilot
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ChatGPT vs. Microsoft Copilot[edit]
ChatGPT and Microsoft Copilot are two prominent consumer-facing generative artificial intelligence services. Both platforms utilize large language models developed by OpenAI, specifically the GPT-4 and GPT-4o architectures. While they share a technological foundation, the two products differ in their intended use cases, system integrations, and methods of retrieving real-time information.
ChatGPT was released by OpenAI in November 2022 as a standalone conversational interface.[1] It allows users to interact with the model via a web browser or mobile application. Microsoft Copilot, originally launched as Bing Chat in early 2023, represents Microsoft's effort to integrate OpenAI's technology directly into the Windows operating system, the Bing search engine, and the Microsoft 365 productivity suite.[2]
Comparison table[edit]
| Feature | ChatGPT | Microsoft Copilot |
|---|---|---|
| Developer | OpenAI | Microsoft |
| Underlying model | GPT-4o, o1, GPT-4 | GPT-4o, GPT-4 |
| Primary interface | Web (chatgpt.com), mobile apps | Windows 11, Bing, Edge, Office 365 |
| Search engine | Proprietary "ChatGPT Search" | Bing Search |
| Image generation | DALL-E 3 | DALL-E 3 (via Designer) |
| Office integration | None (standalone) | Deep integration with Word, Excel, PowerPoint |
| Enterprise privacy | ChatGPT Enterprise/Team | Microsoft 365 Copilot (Enterprise data protection) |
| Customization | Custom GPTs | Copilot Studio / GPTs |
Technological foundation[edit]
The primary difference between the two services lies in their deployment. ChatGPT operates within a "walled garden" where the user interacts directly with the OpenAI API. It offers features like "Memory," which allows the bot to remember specific preferences across different chat sessions. ChatGPT also provides a store for "GPTs," which are specialized versions of the chatbot tailored for specific tasks like coding, creative writing, or academic research.[3]
Copilot functions as an orchestrator between the user, the GPT model, and the Microsoft Graph (the data stored in a user's Microsoft account). This allows Copilot to perform actions like summarizing an unread email in Outlook or generating a chart in Microsoft Excel based on a natural language prompt. Unlike ChatGPT, which added web search as a distinct feature later in its development, Copilot was built from the start to cite its sources using the Bing search index. This results in an interface that frequently provides footnotes and links to external websites within its responses.
Pricing and access[edit]
Both services follow a "freemium" model. Free tiers provide access to the standard models with certain usage limits. The paid subscriptions—ChatGPT Plus and Copilot Pro—are both priced at approximately $20 per month. ChatGPT Plus users often receive earlier access to new OpenAI research models, such as the "o1" series. Copilot Pro users gain the ability to use the AI features inside Office applications, a feature not available through OpenAI's subscription.
