1. What happened to all the data Copilot trained on that was confidential? How is that data separated and deleted from the model’s training? How can we be sure it’s gone?
2. This issue was found; unfortunately without a much better security posture from Microsoft, we have no way of knowing what issues are currently lurking that are as bad as —- if not worse than —- what happened here.
There’s a serious fundamental flaw in the thinking and misguided incentives that led to “sprinkle AI everywhere”, and instead of taking a step back and rethinking that approach, we’re going to get pieced together fixes and still be left with the foundational problem that everyone’s data is just one prompt injection away from being taken; whether it’s labeled as “secure” or not.
I'd add (3) - a DLP policy is apparently ineffective at its purpose: monitoring data sharing between machines. (https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/purview/dlp-learn-about-dl...).
Directly from the DLP feature page:
> DLP, with collection policies, monitors and protects against oversharing to Unmanaged cloud apps by targeting data transmitted on your network and in Microsoft Edge for Business. Create policies that target Inline web traffic (preview) and Network activity (preview) to cover locations like:
> OpenAI ChatGPT—for Edge for Business and Network options > Google Gemini—for Edge for Business and Network options > DeepSeek—for Edge for Business and Network options > Microsoft Copilot—for Edge for Business and Network options > Over 34,000 cloud apps in the Microsoft Defender for Cloud Apps cloud app catalog—Network option only
They have significant experience in this. Microsoft software since the 2014, for the most part, is also paraphrased from other people's code they find laying around online.
It depends. E.g. OpenAI says: "By default, we do not train on any inputs or outputs from our products for business users, including ChatGPT Team, ChatGPT Enterprise, and the API."[0]
[0] https://openai.com/policies/how-your-data-is-used-to-improve...
Microsoft releasing overly ambitious features with disastrous consequences.
Apple releasing features so unambitious it's hard to remember they're there.
Big tech is reaping what they've sown in a very satisfying way.
How is having Copilot breach trust and privacy an “advisory”? Am I missing something?
What's the actual action needed here by a security team? None. You can hate it or not care but the end of the day there's no remediation or imminent harm, just a potential issue with DLP policies. Don't make it look like a 0-day that they actually have to deal with.
Unfortunately "Advisory" is a report written about a security incident, like an official statement about the bug, it's impact, and how to fix it -- which differs from the english meaning... it's not meant to mean to "advise" people or to "take something" under "advisory" (which, is a very soft statement typically).
The basic distinction in the infosec industry is that advisories are what you publish to tell customers that you had a bug in your product that might have exposed them or their data to attacks and you want them to take some specific action (e.g., upgrade a package, review logs); while an incident report is what you publish when you know that the damage happened, it involved your infrastructure, and you want to share some details about happened and how you're going to prevent it from happening again.
Because the latter invites a lot more public attention and regulatory scrutiny, a company like Microsoft will go out of their way to stick to advisories whenever possible (or just keep incidents under wraps). It might have happened at some points in their history, but off the top of my head, I don't recall Microsoft ever publishing a first-party security incident report.
An advisory gives notice and/or warns about something, and may give recommendations on possible actions (but doesn’t have to).
So, yes, technically, it's de-facto advisory to publish this information, but assigning "advisory" as a severity tag here is questionable.
100 nasty bugs in the code
100 bugs in the code
Take one down
Patch it around
-127 nasty bugs in the codeYou guys need to read the actual manifestos these AI leaders have written. And if not them, then read the propagandist stories they have others write like The Overstory by Richard Powers which is an arrogant pile of trash that culminates in the moral:
humans are horrible and obsolete and all should die and leave the earth for our new AI child
Which is of course, horseshit. They just want most people to die off, not all. And certainly not themselves.
They don't care about your confidential information, or anything else about you.
I work in one of the special legal jurisdictions, such fubar would normally mean banning such product from company for good. Its micro$oft so unfortunately not possible yet, but oh boy are they digging their grave with such public incompetence, with horrible handling of the situation on top of that. For many companies, this is top priority right behind assuring enough cash flow, not some marginal regulatory topic. Dumb greedy amateurs.