Under File Options General, the choice to enable Office intelligent services is removed. Question 2, I am unable to use Dictate options in word and powerpointMicrosoft 365 subscribers, you're using Office 2019 Home and Student and the feature is not available in Office 2019. To provide the intelligent services to customers, Microsoft needs to be able to securely collect your written or visual content you generate in your Office applications and does not share business customer data with our advertiser-supported services, nor do we mine it for marketing or advertising. Microsoft Intelligent Services In a locked thread here a user asked what content MS collects and got the same boilerplate answer over and over which frankly looks evasive. I think it's safe to assume the answer MS doesn't want to give is that, while I'm sure it's secure, they collect every in your documents. Work smarter with intelligent services. Artificial intelligence is cutting edge stuff. With Microsoft 365 and Windows 10, these new technologies create smarter, more beautiful docs with less sweat and save you time.
- Microsoft Office Intelligent Services Co
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Intelligent services bring the power of the cloud to Office apps to help save you time and produce better results. These features help you improve your writi.
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For a list of Office products covered by this privacy information, see Privacy controls available for Office products.
Microsoft is committed to providing you with the information and controls you need to make choices about how your data is collected and used when you’re using Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise (previously named Office 365 ProPlus).
Starting with Version 1904 of Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise, there are new policy settings that will allow you to control settings related to the following:
Diagnostic data that is collected and sent to Microsoft about Office client software being used
Connected experiences that use cloud-based functionality to provide enhanced Office features to you and your users.
The following are the five new policy settings:
- Configure the level of client software diagnostic data sent by Office to Microsoft
- Allow the use of connected experiences in Office that analyze content
- Allow the use of connected experiences in Office that download online content
- Allow the use of additional optional connected experiences in Office
- Allow the use of connected experiences in Office
These policy settings can be implemented by using either Group Policy or the Office cloud policy service. If you’re using Group Policy, you need to download the most current version of the Administrative Template files (ADMX/ADML) from the Microsoft Download Center.
Note
- For information on how to manage privacy controls for Office for Mac, see Use preferences to manage privacy controls for Office for Mac.
- For information about similar settings for Office on iOS devices, see Use preferences to manage privacy controls for Office on iOS devices.
- For information about similar settings for Office on Android devices, see Use policy settings to manage privacy controls for Office on Android devices.
- For information about privacy controls for Office for the web applications, see Use policy settings to manage privacy controls for Office for the web applications.
If you’re using the Group Policy Management tool, all these policy settings are located under User ConfigurationPoliciesAdministrative TemplatesMicrosoft Office 2016PrivacyTrust Center.
These new policy settings also apply to the desktop versions of Project and Visio that come with some subscription plans, such as Project Plan 5 or Visio Plan 2. They also apply to Microsoft 365 Apps for business (previously named Office 365 Business).
There are also some existing policy settings that will no longer apply to Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise, and there are some user interface (UI) changes for privacy settings that you should be aware of because your users might notice those changes and ask about them.
As with any new policy settings, you should carefully test them out in a limited, controlled environment to ensure the settings you configure have the desired effect before you implement the policy settings more widely in your organization.
Policy setting for diagnostic data
Diagnostic data is used to keep Office secure and up-to-date, detect, diagnose and remediate problems, and also make product improvements.
You can use the Configure the level of client software diagnostic data sent by Office to Microsoft policy setting to choose what level of diagnostic data is sent to Microsoft.
If you enable this policy setting, you must choose which level of diagnostic data is sent to Microsoft. Your choices are Required, Optional, or Neither.
If you choose Required, the minimum data necessary to help keep Office secure, up-to-date, and performing as expected on the device it’s installed on is sent to Microsoft.
If you choose Optional, additional data that helps make product improvements and provides enhanced information to help detect, diagnose, and remediate issues is sent to Microsoft. If you choose to send optional diagnostic data, required diagnostic data is also included.
If you choose Neither, no diagnostic data about Office client software running on the user’s device is sent to Microsoft. This option, however, significantly limits Microsoft’s ability to detect, diagnose, and remediate problems that your users may encounter when using Office.
If you disable or don’t configure this policy setting, both optional and required diagnostic data are sent to Microsoft.
Note
Even if you choose Neither, required service data will be sent from the user's device to Microsoft. For more information, see Required service data for Office.
For more information about diagnostic data, see the following:
Policy settings for connected experiences
Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise consists of client software applications and connected experiences designed to enable you to create, communicate, and collaborate more effectively. Working with others on a document stored on OneDrive for Business or translating the contents of a Word document into a different language are examples of connected experiences.
We understand that you might want to choose which types of connected experiences are available to your users when they’re working in Office applications. So we have provided four new policy settings for you:
- Allow the use of connected experiences in Office that analyze content
- Allow the use of connected experiences in Office that download online content
- Allow the use of additional optional connected experiences in Office
- Allow the use of connected experiences in Office
If you don't configure these policy settings, all connected experiences are available. This gives your users all the features and functionality accessible through Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise. But we understand that you might need to turn off some or all of these connected experiences to meet certain requirements of your organization.
If you choose not to provide your users with certain types of connected experiences, either the ribbon or menu command for those connected experiences will be grayed out or users will get an error message when they try to use those connected experiences. In that case, no required service data for those connected experiences will be sent to Microsoft.
Your users won’t be able to choose whether to turn these connected experiences included with Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise on or off if they are signed into Office with their organizational credentials, which is sometimes referred to as a work or school account.
Policy setting for connected experiences that analyze your content
These are experiences that use your Office content to provide you with design recommendations, editing suggestions, data insights, and similar features. For example, PowerPoint Designer or Translator. For a list of these connected experiences, see Connected experiences in Office.
You can use the Allow the use of connected experiences in Office that analyze content policy setting to control whether these types of connected experiences are available to your users. If you don’t configure this policy setting, these connected experiences will be available to your users.
Note that if you disable the Allow the use of connected experiences in Office policy setting, connected experiences that analyze content won’t be available to your users.
Policy setting for connected experiences that download online content
These are experiences that allow you to search and download online content including templates, images, 3D models, videos, and reference materials to enhance your documents. For example, Office templates or PowerPoint QuickStarter. For a list of these connected experiences, see Connected experiences in Office.
You can use the Allow the use of connected experiences in Office that download online content policy setting to control whether these types of connected experiences are available to your users. If you don’t configure this policy setting, these connected experiences will be available to your users.
Note that if you disable the Allow the use of connected experiences in Office policy setting, connected experiences that download online content won’t be available to your users.
Policy setting for optional connected experiences
In addition to the connected experiences mentioned above that are included with Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise, there are some optional connected experiences that you may choose to allow your users to access with their organization account. For example, the LinkedIn features of the Resume Assistant in Word or the 3D Maps feature in Excel, which uses Bing. For more examples, see Overview of optional connected experiences in Office.
These connected experiences are different because they are not covered by your organization’s commercial agreement with Microsoft. Optional connected experiences are offered by Microsoft directly to your users and are governed by the Microsoft Services Agreement instead of the Online Services Terms. In some cases, third-party content or functionality are provided through these optional connected experiences and other terms may also apply. For more information, see Overview of optional connected experiences in Office.
You can use the Allow the use of additional optional connected experiences in Office policy setting to control whether these types of connected experiences are available to your users. If you don’t configure this policy setting, these optional connected experiences will be available to your users.
Note
To apply the Allow the use of additional optional connected experiences in Office policy setting to volume licensed versions of Office 2019, Project 2019, or Visio 2019, you must use Group Policy. You can't use the Office cloud policy service. This applies to when Office 2019, Project 2019, or Visio 2019 is configured to use the PerpetualVL2019 update channel.
Even if you choose to make these optional connected experiences available to your users, your users will have the option to turn them off as a group by going to the privacy settings dialog box. Your users will only have this choice if they are signed into Office with their organizational credentials (sometimes referred to as a work or school account), not if they are signed in with a personal email address.
Also, some of these optional connected experiences are also considered to be connected experiences that analyze content or that download online content. For example, Insert Online Pictures is an optional connected experience, powered by Microsoft Bing, but it’s also considered to be a connected experience that downloads online content. Therefore, if you disable the Allow the use of connected experiences in Office that download online content policy setting, Insert Online Pictures won’t be available to your users. It won’t be available even if you have enabled the Allow the use of additional optional connected experiences in Office policy setting. For more information about which connected experiences analyze content or download online content, see Connected experiences in Office.
There is one exception to take note of. The Allow the use of additional optional connected experiences in Office policy setting does not control experiences that require you to connect your LinkedIn account to your Microsoft work or school account. To control these types of experiences, such as the LinkedIn information on a profile card in Outlook, see LinkedIn in Microsoft apps and services and Integrate LinkedIn account connections in Azure Active Directory.
Policy setting for most connected experiences
You can use the Allow the use of connected experiences in Office policy setting to control whether most connected experiences accessible through Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise are available to your users. If you disable the policy setting, the following types of connected experiences won’t be available to your users:
- Experiences that analyze your content
- Experiences that download online content
- Optional connected experiences
In addition, if you disable this policy setting, most other connected experiences are also turned off, such as co-authoring and online file storage. For a list of these other connected experiences, see Connected experiences in Office.
But even if you disable this policy setting, limited Office functionality will remain available, such as synching a mailbox in Outlook, and Teams and Skype for Business will continue to work. Essential services, such as the licensing service that confirms that you’re properly licensed to use Office, will also remain available.
Existing policy settings that are replaced by new policy settings
There are two existing policy settings that are no longer applicable to Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise, starting with Version 1904. Those policy settings are the following:
Send personal information, which can be found under User ConfigurationPoliciesAdministrative TemplatesMicrosoft Office 2016PrivacyTrust Center.
Online Content Options, which can be found under User ConfigurationPoliciesAdministrative TemplatesMicrosoft Office 2016Tools | Options | General | Service Options...Online Content.
Starting with Version 1904, configuring these two existing policy settings will have no effect on Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise. They are no longer applicable because their functionality is replaced by these new policy settings:
- Allow the use of connected experiences in Office that analyze content
- Allow the use of connected experiences in Office that download online content
- Allow the use of additional optional connected experiences in Office
- Allow the use of connected experiences in Office
These new policy settings can give you a finer level control than the two existing policy settings. For example, previously if you used the Send personal information policy setting, both PowerPoint QuickStarter and Smart Lookup would be turned off. But now, with the new policy settings, if you use the Allow the use of connected experiences in Office that analyze content policy setting to turn off that type of connected experiences, only Smart Lookup is turned off. PowerPoint QuickStarter will still be available to your users.
The policy settings still appear in the Group Policy Management tool because they are still applicable to volume licensed versions of Office 2016 and Office 2019, such as Office Professional Plus 2019.
What about existing policy settings that control connected experiences?
As you probably already know, there are some existing policy settings that allow you to control connected experiences. Here are a few examples of existing policy settings:
PowerPoint Designer Options, under User ConfigurationPoliciesAdministrative TemplatesMicrosoft Office 2016Tools | Options | General | Service Options...PowerPoint Designer
Turn off QuickStarter, under User ConfigurationPoliciesAdministrative TemplatesMicrosoft PowerPoint 2016PowerPoint OptionsGeneral
Allow LinkedIn Resume Assistant feature, under User ConfigurationPoliciesAdministrative TemplatesMicrosoft Word 2016Word OptionsGeneral
You can still use these existing policy settings if you want to turn off individual connected experiences. But keep in mind that if you use one of the new policy settings, that new policy setting might turn off a connected experience that you turned on by using a different policy setting. For example, if you enable the Allow LinkedIn Resume Assistant feature policy setting, but disable the Allow the use of connected experiences in Office policy setting, the LinkedIn Resume Assistant won’t be available to your users.
In general, if one policy setting is configured to turn on a specific connected experience while at the same time another policy setting is configured to turn off that type of connected experience, then that specific connected experience is turned off for your users.
Privacy-related changes to the Office UI
There are some changes to the user interface (UI) of Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise related to privacy that your users might notice and ask about. These changes are a direct result of the new privacy controls and policy settings available starting in Version 1904.
Dialog about optional connected experiences
Microsoft Office Intelligent Services Co
If you have chosen to provide your users with optional connected experiences, the first time your users open an Office app after they've been updated to Version 1904 or later, an informational dialog box will appear. This dialog box informs your users that you have given them the choice to use these optional connected experiences and lets them know they can go to File > Account > Account Privacy to change this setting.
Privacy settings removed from the Office UI
The following settings are removed from File > Options > Trust Center > Trust Center Settings… > Privacy Options:
Get designs, information, recommendations, and services by allowing Office to access and make product improvements based on Office content on my device.
Let Office connect to online services from Microsoft to provide functionality that’s relevant to your usage and preference.
Also, under File > Options > General, the choice to enable Office intelligent services is removed.
As the admin for your organization, you now control the equivalent settings to these through the new policy settings described earlier.
Privacy settings added to the Office UI
The following are new elements added to the Office UI:
Under File > Account, users will see a new choice for Account Privacy > Manage Settings. It’s under Manage Settings where users can turn off optional connected experiences, if you have given them that option.
Under File > Options > Trust Center > Trust Center Settings… > Privacy Options, there is an option to enable the use of the Diagnostic Data Viewer on the device.
Control privacy settings by editing the registry
Some admins prefer to change settings directly in the registry, for example by using a script, instead of by using Group Policy or the Office cloud policy service. You can use the following information to configure privacy settings directly in the registry.
Policy setting | Registry setting | Values |
---|---|---|
Configure the level of client software diagnostic data sent by Office to Microsoft | SendTelemetry | 1=Required 2=Optional 3=Neither |
Allow the use of connected experiences in Office that analyze content | UserContentDisabled | 1=Enabled 2=Disabled |
Allow the use of connected experiences in Office that download online content | DownloadContentDisabled | 1=Enabled 2=Disabled |
Allow the use of additional optional connected experiences in Office | ControllerConnectedServicesEnabled | 1=Enabled 2=Disabled |
Allow the use of connected experiences in Office | DisconnectedState | 1=Enabled 2=Disabled |
To create a .reg file for the privacy settings, open Notepad and copy in the following lines. Adjust the values to suit your needs, and then save the file. Be sure the file name has an extension of .reg
For example, you can use this .reg file with the regedit.exe command in a script to configure privacy settings for the user.
Lesson 36: Office Intelligent Services
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Office Intelligent Services
Microsoft Office contains many useful features, including a language translator and PowerPoint Designer. But when you try to use these features, a prompt may ask you to activate Intelligent Services first. While it may seem like an easy decision, you should consider what you're agreeing to when you decide to turn on Intelligent Services.
What are Intelligent Services?
Intelligent Services power several cloud-enhanced features throughout Office. In order for these features to work, however, Microsoft must collect and analyze the contents of your document. In addition, it will collect data on how you use Office.
Should you use Intelligent Services?
Before deciding whether to enable Intelligent Services, you should first know what Microsoft does with the data it collects. According to its privacy statement, it uses collected data for things like product development, research, and targeted advertising.
Before activating Intelligent Services, ask yourself if you're comfortable with Microsoft having access to your work. If you're concerned about the company collecting your data or seeing confidential documents, you may not want to use any Intelligent Services-based features.
Activating Intelligent Services
By default, Intelligent Services is turned off, and you have two ways to activate it.
The quickest method is to select an Intelligent Services-based feature, such as Translate. A prompt will appear, asking you to turn on Intelligent Services. Simply click Turn on to enable it.
The other method involves a few more steps.
- Click the File tab in Word, Excel, PowerPoint, or Outlook.
- Click Options.
- Click the checkbox labeled Enable services, then click OK.
Notable features
PowerPoint Designer can analyze the images, lists, and text in your presentation to generate professional-looking slides, and it uses Intelligent Services to give you more personalized suggestions.
To use it, select the Design tab, then click Design Ideas on the right. As you add elements to your slide, the feature will update with new ideas. It’ll even give you suggestions if you have a completely blank presentation.
Keep in mind, however, that PowerPoint Designer is exclusive to Office 365 subscribers.
Smart Lookup allows you to conduct an online search of a word or phrase within Word, Excel, or PowerPoint. To use it, right-click a term, then select Smart Lookup. A window will appear on the right, giving you the most relevant search results and definitions.
To use Translate, simply right-click on a word or phrase, then select Translate. You can then translate your selection into dozens of languages.
Keep in mind that this feature isn’t perfect, so don’t be surprised if the results aren’t totally accurate.
Microsoft Office Intelligent Services In Java
Office 365
It’s worth noting that some Intelligent Service-based features, like the PowerPoint Designer, only work with an Office 365 subscription.Microsoft also plans to add more Intelligent Service-based features to Office 365 in the future. Upcoming features include Ideas in Excel, which suggests different ways to display your data; and the LinkedIn Resume Assistant, which uses the entire LinkedIn database to help make your resume stand out.
Office Intelligent Services Microsoft Word
From presentation ideas to Smart Lookup, Intelligent Services can provide a number of useful features if you’re comfortable with Microsoft collecting your data.
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