
Let’s play a game.
Imagine you hire a new assistant. Bright. Helpful. Always eager to please.
You ask it to pull a report. It delivers.
You ask it to summarize last quarter’s numbers. Done in seconds.
Now imagine that same assistant is also working nights for your competitors.
Or worse—feeding intel straight to the hackers you thought you were keeping out.
That’s Copilot.
Here’s the thing nobody wants to say out loud: Copilot isn’t just your best employee. It’s also the perfect insider threat.
Why? Because Copilot doesn’t care who asks the question.
“Show me the 401k census.”
“Find client contracts.”
“Pull all Social Security numbers.”
BAM. Delivered. Neatly packaged. Straight into the hands of whoever’s got a foothold in your tenant.
And don’t fool yourself—attackers already know this game.
They don’t break in anymore. They log in.
They don’t guess your password. They steal your token.
They don’t smash the front door. They slip in through the inbox rule you forgot to delete.
And once they’re inside? Copilot becomes their personal research assistant.
Think about it: you invested in MFA, firewalls, endpoint protection—the whole stack. And yet, the very tool you deployed to make your clients more productive is now the easiest way for attackers to harvest everything that matters.
So, here’s the real question: if you don’t know how to spot compromise in M365 or lock down Copilot configurations before they turn on you, how long before you’re cleaning up the mess?
And let’s be honest—cleaning up is expensive. It tanks profitability. It kills client trust. And sometimes, it ends client relationships for good.
That’s why we’re running a live session you can’t afford to miss:
Copilot Under Attack: Spot M365 Compromise, Secure Client Data, and Communicate Risk Before It’s Too Late
Friday, September 12, 2025 at 12pm ET
We’ll walk through the indicators of compromise you’re probably missing, the PII exposure Copilot happily coughs up, and the Fall 2025 M365 Hardening Guide—a step-by-step playbook you can use immediately.
Here’s your chance to get ahead of the threat—before your “assistant” decides it likes working for the bad guys better.