Single-Click Copilot Exploit Compromises Microsoft AI Users

A newly discovered single-click Copilot exploit is raising fresh concerns about the security of AI tools in business environments. Security researchers at Varonis have uncovered a technique called Reprompt that allows attackers to steal sensitive information from Microsoft Copilot with just one click, bypassing typical red flags such as phishing emails or malicious websites. For business owners who rely on AI to boost productivity, this Microsoft Copilot vulnerability is a reminder that convenience can also introduce new AI security risks.

Microsoft Cloud PC Access Issues: Fix Incoming

Microsoft Cloud PC Access Issues are showing up for some business users after a recent Windows Update unexpectedly blocked access to Microsoft 365 Cloud PCs in certain setups. Bleeping Computer reports that the issue began around 7:00 p.m. UTC on January 13. Since then, some users have experienced sign-in failures, dropped Cloud PC sessions, and intermittent connectivity problems. Microsoft acknowledged the glitch through support documents and service health alerts, noting that the update triggered unexpected authentication behavior on the client side.

Palo Alto Patches Firewall Crash Bug

A solid firewall is critical to your business’s cybersecurity, especially when your employees log in from home or on the road. However, a recent Palo Alto firewall crash bug could have allowed attackers to knock systems offline. Palo Alto Networks revealed that it has fixed the bug that could force a firewall into maintenance mode, cutting off secure access and disrupting business operations. For many IT teams, that kind of outage means dropped VPN sessions, angry remote workers, and a flood of help desk tickets within minutes.

IBM Seeks Stronger AI Data Control for a More Secure AI Future

Artificial intelligence continues to grow as part of daily business operations, and one issue keeps rising to the top: AI data control. Companies want the power of AI, but they also need to know where their data lives and who can access it. With regulations tightening and data breaches making headlines, keeping tight reins on your company's information is essential. IBM is responding to that demand with the launch of the Sovereign Core platform.

Google Meet Gets Smarter About Conference Rooms

If your team uses Google Meet conference rooms, you know it doesn’t take long for a simple meeting to turn into a mess of echoes, feedback, and people talking over each other. Google has rolled out a smart update that tackles one of the most common hybrid meeting problems: too many active microphones in the same room. With new conference room detection, Google Meet can now recognize when multiple devices are in the same physical space and automatically prioritize companion mode.

New n8n Vulnerability Puts Systems at Risk

A recently discovered flaw in n8n has many business owners on edge, and for good reason. Tracked as CVE-2026-21858, the n8n vulnerability allows hackers to run code on self-hosted setups. If your business uses this tool to automate tasks like moving data between CRMs, email tools, or custom apps, this gap could let attackers slip in without a password and take control. Even worse, your automated workflows could propagate malicious changes across multiple systems, meaning one breach could affect several apps at once.

Gmail Gets Smarter With AI Workplace Upgrades

Google is giving Gmail a serious intelligence boost that could be a real time-saver for business owners and their teams. New AI workplace upgrades announced in January 2026 make Gmail feel like a personal assistant. Google is calling the upgrades “the Gemini era,” bringing smarter AI features to help you cut through the noise and focus on the client waiting for an answer, not the 14 replies arguing about meeting times.

Classic Outlook Users Face Encrypted Email Bug

If your team relies on secure communications, you can’t ignore the newly uncovered encrypted email bug in classic Outlook. A recent Microsoft security update to improve protection has unintentionally disrupted how users open encrypted emails. While Microsoft is working on a fix, the issue has already confused businesses that depend on email encryption to protect sensitive information. Why You Need To Pay Attention to This Microsoft Bug Encrypted emails aren't just nice-to-haves.

AI May Not Be the Biggest Job Killer

For the past year, headlines have warned that AI job loss is accelerating and that artificial intelligence is quietly replacing human workers. That narrative feels unsettling and hard to ignore. But new research from Oxford Economics suggests that the story may not be that simple. Despite widespread concern about workforce displacement, there’s still no evidence that AI is directly eliminating jobs at scale. AI Layoff Panic Is Real, But There’s a Gap Between Headlines and Hard Data

Google Scales Back Android Source Code Updates

If you follow Android closely, recent news likely caught your eye. Google is changing how often it releases Android source code updates, and it’s a bigger shift than it sounds at first. After nearly 20 years of quarterly public releases, Google is cutting Android Open Source Project (AOSP) code down to twice a year: one major release in Q2 and a smaller one in Q4. It’s a noticeable change for teams used to a predictable quarterly cadence, even if Google says the goal is a more stable platform.

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