Microsoft unveiled a Super Bowl ad for its Copilot artificial intelligence assistant — seizing a high-profile opportunity to gloss over AI’s pitfalls and risks by focusing on the technology’s potential to supercharge human creativity and ambition.

But what’s most interesting is that it’s not about search.

The 60-second spot reflects Microsoft’s gradual shift to presenting Copilot as a standalone product, no longer framing the AI assistant strictly within the context of Bing search, reports Tom Warren of The Verge, based on an interview with Yusuf Mehdi, Microsoft executive vice president and consumer chief marketing officer.

That contrasts with the way the company positioned its AI assistant when it launched a year ago, as the flagship feature in “the new Bing,” as it was described at the time. Microsoft was looking to chip away at Google’s lead in the search market, but the company’s progress has arguably been minimal on that front.

Copilot is still part of the Bing search experience, but in the year since, Microsoft has increasingly focused on presenting Copilot as a brand in its own right, most recently launching Copilot Pro for individual users.

Bigger picture, technology ads aren’t expected to be as big at the Super Bowl this year as they have been in the past. CNN reports that crypto and AI will give way to more traditional feel-good ads from major brands this year.

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