Microsoft is injecting all of its products with its Copilot “AI,” whether you want it or not, from Office and Edge to Paint and even Notepad —and Windows users, based on what empirical evidence is available, really don’t like it . In fact, “Microslop” is the viral derogatory sobriquet for the company’s AI ventures, a sort of evolution of ye olde “Micro$oft” from the early internet days. The company doesn’t like it at all. Microsoft’s official Copilot Discord server , wherein users and (presumably) at least some Microsoft employees gather to offer tips and help, has reportedly banned the term “Microslop.” Users have found messages containing the nickname automatically deleted. “Your message contains a phrase that is inappropriate,” reads the auto-mod reply if you try to post using the word. As internet users are wont to do, Discord posters have found creative ways around the block, like replacing the o with 0 to make “Microsl0p.” Some users have even reported that they’ve been banned for using the term. We’re out-of-touch elitist jerks seasoned technology reporting professionals here at PCWorld, but it sure seems like consumer sentiment has been turning against Microsoft lately. Between the don’t-call-it-a-forced-update to Windows 11 when Windows 10 was perfectly functional, the creeping injection of Copilot into every aspect of Microsoft’s portfolio from gaming to cloud services to creepy spyware that comes preinstalled on your new laptop , to a notable increase in bugs and destabilizing issues on Windows updates, things aren’t looking great. It surely doesn’t help that the Xbox brand appears to be in an identity crisis as it loses long-time executive leaders, including the reported brains behind its last two years of platform-agnostic marketing. A friend of mine, who is not part of the aforementioned elitist jerk patrol, compared Copilot to the legendarily annoying virtual assistant Clippy just this morning—and it wasn’t a favorable comparison. When your big consumer “AI” push, upon which all your hopes are pinned, loses out to a misstep so culturally relevant that it gets memed on by a Star Trek cartoon , you might just have a branding problem. It doesn’t help that the memory of Microsoft executives claiming that 30 percent of the company’s software is now vibe-coded is such a fresh memory. Microsoft’s attempts at branding Copilot as awesome are laughably tone-deaf, too, as users go so far as to install an extension that changes “Microsoft” to “Microslop” across the entire web . As Windows Latest notes in its report on the situation, this seems to be a symptom of deeper discontent with Microsoft in general and Copilot in particular. And since they’re on the official Copilot Discord server, it seems like a safe assumption that these are the most dedicated Copilot users, a rare coin as the vast majority of Windows users don’t seem to want it at all . It’s shocking that in 2026, Microsoft (or at least its social media managers) don’t seem to be familiar with the Streisand effect . If this petty little move accomplishes anything, it’ll be to make the term “Microslop” even more culturally relevant… as evidenced by, well, this exact article and dozens of others this morning. Well done, Microsoft.