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Copilot's indexing of internal data led to oversharing of sensitive company information. Some corporate customers delayed Copilot deployment due to security and oversharing concerns. On Tuesday, Microsoft released new tools and a guide to help customers mitigate a Copilot security issue that inadvertently let employees access sensitive information, such as CEO emails and HR documents. These updates are designed "to identify and mitigate oversharing and ongoing governance concerns," the company explained in a new blueprint for Microsoft's 365 productivity software suite. AdvertisementAs a result, some customers have deployed Copilot, only to discover that it can enable employees to read an executive's inbox or access sensitive HR documents.
Persons: Copilot, overshares, Microsoft's Copilot, Joe Blow, Joe Organizations: Microsoft, Business
Inside Microsoft's struggles with Copilot
  + stars: | 2024-11-15 | by ( Ashley Stewart | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +23 min
In September 2023, Microsoft's famously soft-spoken CEO, Satya Nadella, unveiled the company's flagship AI product, Copilot, with sweeping fanfare. Some of Microsoft's own employees and executives are privately concerned that Copilot won't be able to deliver on its ambitions. Copilot's struggles have created an opening for Microsoft's rivals, some of whom have seized on the opportunity to promote their own agendas. "Now, when Joe Blow logs into an account and kicks off Copilot, they can see everything," said one Microsoft employee familiar with customer complaints. As complaints and questions over Copilot mount, so does the pressure to justify Microsoft's unprecedented level of spending on AI.
Persons: Microsoft's, Satya Nadella, Gartner, Copilot, it'll, Copilot's, Marc Benioff, Benioff, Goldman Sachs, Marc Andreessen, Andreessen Horowitz, Ethan Miller, Jared Spataro, Spataro, , Joe Blow, Joe, Nadella, Gary Marcus, Marcus, Wile, Coyote, Brontë, Judson Althoff, Jason Zander, Zander, We've, OpenAI, Tasos Katopodis, Steve Jobs Organizations: Microsoft, Venture, Getty, Goldman, BI, Fortune, Excel, Lumen Technologies, Honeywell, Gartner, Wall Street, Initiative, Department of Homeland Security, Employees, San Francisco, Software, Apple, Jobs Locations: Microsoft's, Copilot, New York City
The lack of uniformity allows both firms and employees to present themselves in the best light. This lack of uniformity and the relentless war for talent has firms and employees alike taking advantage of the ambiguity. Rokos has two dozen employees with the title "investment officer" in their LinkedIn profiles. At Coatue, executives sign off on what employees put as their title on LinkedIn, people familiar with the firm's operations said. Members of Tiger Global's front-office team use "investor" as their title on LinkedIn instead of a more specific role.
Persons: , David Einhorn's, James Fishback, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Ken Griffin, Gerald Beeson, Sjoerd, Google's Paul Darrah, Jose Gamez, Rokos, Chris Rokos, Paul Enright, Townie Wells, Enright, Jain, Tiger, Marshall Wace, D.E, Shaw, allocators, Elliott, Don Steinbrugge, Steinbrugge Organizations: Service, Goldman, Bloomberg, Business, Industry, Citadel, Citadel Securities, Jain, Townie, Viking Global, Sigma, Fund, Talent, Agecroft Partners Locations: Greenlight, Miami, Palm Beach, London, Wells, Coatue
Marc Benioff criticized Microsoft's Copilot again, calling it "disappointing" and inaccurate. The Salesforce CEO slammed Microsoft's AI assistant in an X post, saying, "It just doesn't work." AdvertisementMarc Benioff has criticized Microsoft's AI assistant, Copilot, for the second time in as many months. The Salesforce chief called Copilot "disappointing" in a post on X. Salesforce has launched its own AI assistant called Einstein Copilot. On both occasions, Benioff compared Microsoft's Copilot to Clippy — the discontinued animated paperclip that offered suggestions in applications including Word.
Persons: Marc Benioff, Microsoft's Copilot, Microsoft's, , Copilot, Salesforce, Einstein, Clippy, Benioff, Gartner, Microsoft didn't Organizations: Service, Gartner, Microsoft, Business
She recommended being mindful of how much alcohol you're consuming at work events. AdvertisementHeading to happy hour with your colleagues and boss can be fun, but it can also be a tricky social scene to navigate. Dressing inappropriately can be seen as unprofessionalMeier said another common mistake people make at happy hour involves how they dress. AdvertisementLimit physical contact to a handshakeIt's best to remain professional and avoid physical contact beyond a handshake. Related stories"If you wouldn't usually hug a colleague, I personally would avoid hugging a colleague in a happy hour environment," Meier said.
Persons: , it's, Myka Meier, Meier, It's Organizations: Service
"The only category of questions I'd advise singles to avoid outright on early dates is around dating history," she says. "Be playful, and ask questions that will make your date smile," Anderson says. "Planning for the second date is a form of courtship, a form of testing that mutual interest," she says. Grace Lee Dating CoachPlus, she says, putting someone on the spot rarely encourages an honest answer. If you want to make it clear that you would like a second date, bring the conversation back to a restaurant or experience you both discussed.
Persons: Blaine Anderson, Blaine, Anderson, I'd, Grace Lee, Lee Locations: Austin , Texas, New York City
I, like many others, didn't spare any details, especially if I was upset or hurt in some way. Posting details about a person you were previously close to or a past employer "might be signaling that you're not trustworthy," Gabriel says. "Social media is such a double-edged sword, where it's an amazing thing, but it's again, how you use it," Goldstein says. Respect and kindness go a long way and are important to keep in mind when you draft that social media announcement, she says. Here are three healthy ways to self-disclose after a personal or professional split, according to Gabriel and Goldstein.
Persons: Shira Gabriel, it's, Gabriel, Eliana Goldstein, Goldstein Organizations: University at Buffalo Locations: It's
Read previewA LinkedIn job announcement post is often where your professional network first learns of your new position. AdvertisementFor Holm, a job announcement post should always be positive. "If people are job-hopping a lot, that doesn't look good in the eyes of any employer," Holm said. While there are different situations and sometimes things just don't work out, a recruiter might wonder why this person hasn't kept a job, Holm said. You don't want your current colleagues or employer to discover you're leaving your current workplace via LinkedIn, Holm said.
Persons: , Carly Holm, Holm, it's, that's, hasn't Organizations: Service, Nashville, Bank of America, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, LinkedIn, Business, Facebook
So, what can set you apart from a sea of Apple candidates? We asked an Apple employee and four tech career experts and recruiters. The interview process at Apple is "generally straightforward," Theresa Park, a former creative recruiter at the company, said. Related storiesOne Reddit user said that during a monthlong interview process as a software engineering candidate, he was asked to design a vending machine. According to posts on the anonymous employee forum Blind, some Apple recruiters might even disclose the exact questions that will be asked in an interview.
Persons: , Apple, Dan Ives, Marc Cenedella, Daniel Harten, Harten, Theresa Park, Glassdoor, Tim Cook, Cook, Leander Kahney, Greg Joswiak, Apple's, Kahney, Arianny Mercedes, Park, they've, Cenedella, Apple didn't Organizations: Service, Apple, Apple Intelligence, Business, Big Tech, American Express Locations: tooting, Munich
Karen Lynch, the CEO of CVS Health, has a tip for striking the right balance: Share whatever directly helps you solve a problem or connect with someone else. Early in her tenure, she ran a company-wide town hall urging managers to take mental health more seriously. In an unplanned moment, she shared something she'd never told another colleague before, she said: When she was 12, her mother committed suicide. She also felt ashamed, anxious and embarrassed about it, so she spent much of her career being strictly about business, she said. But midway through the town hall, with 50,000 employees listening, Lynch realized she could help her co-workers understand why she felt so strongly about mental health.
Persons: Karen Lynch, Lynch, LinkedIn's, she'd, She'd Organizations: CVS Health, Aetna
Her book “Over the Influence: Why Social Media Is Toxic for Women and Girls — And How We Can Take It Back” was recently published by Alcove Press. CNN —A year after his landmark advisory warning about the dangers social media poses to young people, US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy upped the ante on Monday by calling for mandated warning labels on social media apps. And he pointed out that young people spend an average of 4.8 hours on social media each day, according to a 2023 Gallup survey. Murthy is right to call on Congress to put warning labels on social networks. This could serve as the alarm parents need to protect their kids from the harmful effects of social media.
Persons: Kara Alaimo, CNN —, Vivek Murthy, Alaimo, , Murthy, shouldn’t, I’ve, It’s, you’re Organizations: Fairleigh Dickinson University, Women, Press, Facebook, CNN, New York Times, Gallup, Digital, Boston Children’s, Twitter
Sitting with Howard Stern, the nation’s best-known shock jock, President Biden on Friday replayed the deepest lows of his life story and the highs of a decades-long political career in an appearance designed to reintroduce him to an audience of millions. In a surprise interview on “The Howard Stern Show” that lasted for more than an hour, Mr. Stern, a skilled interviewer versed in the art of oversharing, repeatedly asked Mr. Biden to revisit the stories of love and loss that have defined his public image. So Mr. Biden spoke at length about grieving the death of his first wife, Neilia, and 13-month-old daughter, Naomi, who were killed in a car crash in 1972. He talked about meeting his second wife, Jill Biden, on a blind date, and said, as he often has, that his deceased son Beau Biden should be the Biden sitting in the Oval Office. At one point, Mr. Biden — who also told Mr. Stern that he had fallen “ass over tin cup” in love with his first wife — that he had contemplated suicide after Neilia and Naomi were killed.
Persons: Howard Stern, Biden, Stern, Mr, Neilia, Naomi, Jill Biden, Beau Biden, Biden —, Organizations: Biden
They shared the biggest red flags they see and what candidates should say instead. "Employers and interviewers are specifically trained not to ask questions around candidates' family or financial situation, so it's best not to bring it up," he said. Revealing that you don't have other job options could give potential employers a reason to lower your salary, he said. They'd often ask candidates problem-solving questions with three or four layers. AdvertisementDe Leo said the best candidates don't always give a classroom answer, but they can show their approach to a problem step-by-step.
Persons: , Maya Wald, you've, Wald, Matt Opramolla, Carter De Leo, De Leo, Bonnie Dilber, you'd, Chris Williams, Williams, Nolan, they'd Organizations: Service, Business, Google, Employers, Microsoft
Phoebe Philo Breaks Her Silence
  + stars: | 2024-03-17 | by ( Vanessa Friedman | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The last time Phoebe Philo, who has been called “the Chanel of her generation,” gave a formal interview was a decade ago. The designer, whose work offered women respite from the limits of the male gaze, has never been all that interested in explaining herself. “I say most of what I feel, and most of what is worth me saying, through what I make,” she offered recently. Under the bomber she wore gray pinstripe trousers and a matching oversize shirt. When Ms. Philo speaks, she does so in elliptical phrases, using questions as an opening to more questions.
Persons: Phoebe Philo, Chanel, , , Philo Organizations: Bond Locations: Ladbroke Grove, London, oversharing
"Maestro" star Bradley Cooper lost the Oscar for best actor to "Oppenheimer" actor Cillian Murphy. Cooper, a Pennsylvania native, plays himself on 'Abbott Elementary'Bradley Cooper with the cast of "Abbott Elementary" on season three, episode six. Advertisement"I wasn't in 'Oppenheimer,'" Cooper responds, with a skeptical Ava asking, "Are you sure? The movie nabbed several Oscar nominations, including best actor, best actress, and best picture. He received rave reviews for his portrayal, was a frontrunner for best actor, and won the award on Sunday.
Persons: Maestro, Bradley Cooper, Oscar, Oppenheimer, Cillian Murphy, Cooper, Abbott, , Cooper's Oscar, Leonard Bernstein, Willard R, Melissa Schemmenti's, Lisa Ann Walter, Khalil, Melissa, I'm, Johnson, William Stanford Davis, he's, Ava Coleman, Janelle James, Barbara Howard, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Janine Teagues, Quinta Brunson, Ava, Carey Mulligan, Felicia Montealegre, Jason McDonald, Netflix Cooper, , Irina Shayk, Dax Shephard's, Emma Stone, Netflix Murphy, Christopher Nolan's, Ryan Gosling, Ken, Billie Eilish, Bradley Organizations: Service, Abbott, ABC, Guardians, Marvel, Netflix, Academy Locations: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Philly
I've worked in HR for 10 years, specifically, I work with senior leaders to ensure all sorts of HR compliance is in place. When it comes to HR, people are usually curious about how to stand out at work. After working in HR for 10 years, here are three things I'd never do in the workplace. In my HR role, I've noticed, that successful people tend to be very direct about their accomplishments and more vocal, whereas super-humble individuals tend not to talk about their achievements or advocate for themselves as much. AdvertisementAs a result, I've seen more negative things come out of sticking around too long at company functions than positive ones.
Persons: Valerie Rodriguez, I've, there's, Oversharing, it's, shouldn't, who's Organizations: Service, Business Locations: New Jersey
New York CNN —Office work has become a far less rigid affair in the era of remote collaboration and hybrid schedules. (Just ask me, I’m writing this in bed while wearing a hoodie and yoga pants on a Monday afternoon.) But a lot of companies haven’t updated their scripts when it comes to delivering hard news to their employees. And in both cases, the fired employees funneled their anger toward a social media audience that would have their backs. “The comments were right — it was scripted … I just basically read it, it wasn’t sincere,” she says in her second apology video.
Persons: CNN Business ’, , that’s, Kyte Baby, , James Haggerty, Eva Rothenberg, ” Kyte, Ying Liu, Liu, , “ I’ve, Matthew Prince, ” Prince, “ There’s Organizations: CNN Business, New York CNN, Corporate, Times Locations: New York, America
Our breakup happened in the middle of a parking lot full of nosey moms at school pickup. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . She confronted me in the middle of a parking lot full of nosey moms at school pick-up. I stood in that parking lot long after all the cars and stares had left, overwhelmed with sadness. It was more devastating than any romantic breakup I've ever experienced — and I've been dumped via text by a boyfriend.
Persons: , It's, I've Organizations: Service Locations: North America
Another Gallup survey found that Gen Z was the least engaged group in the workplace and the most burned out from their jobs. To cope, Gen Z employees are taking significantly more sick days than their older peers — often due to mental health. You don't know what you don't know. Lou Ali, 41, who manages Malcolmson and another Gen Z employee at the PR agency Honcho, said she was puzzled by what she saw as the paradox of Gen Z's workplace anxiety. She added, "You don't know what you don't know.
Persons: Emma Malcolmson, Malcolmson, Gen Zers, Gen Xers, millennials, Z, Gen Z's, Gen Z, Zers, , Mele, Cloey Callahan, I'm Slack, Callahan, it's, Lou Ali, Ali, they've, Z's, Ellen Hendriksen, Hendriksen, there's, Henriksen, we'll, Michelle P, King, Eve Upton, Clark Organizations: Health, Safety, Deloitte, Gallup, Depression Association of America, Google, OnePoll Locations: Canada, New York
Beige flags: Why they can doom your dating profile
  + stars: | 2023-10-03 | by ( Faye Chiu | Terry Ward | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +8 min
That these traits are neither here nor there only makes beige flags all the more confusing. She first heard of beige flags on X (formerly known as Twitter) in the context of “fannish discussions about what BTS members’ beige flags are, and beige flags for other K-pop bands,” she said. Beige flags and your dating profileFor Blaine Anderson, who runs a coaching website for heterosexual men called Dating By Blaine, strategizing with clients to eliminate beige flags from their conversations and dating profiles is essential to help them stand out in an enormous pool of suitors, particularly online. One of the most common beige flags on anyone’s dating profile is the line “I love to travel,” she said. Dig beyond labeling it a beige flagA little grace surrounding beige flags can go a long way.
Persons: who’s, , Jennifer McGillan, , Alyssa Mairanz, ” Mairanz, Mairanz, Blaine Anderson, Blaine, ” Anderson, “ It’s, Sharin Shafer, it’s, Clarissa Silva, Silva, ” Silva, Shafer, ” Shafer, Terry Ward Organizations: CNN, New, Adobe, The Agency Locations: TikTok, Starkville , Mississippi, New York City, Venice, London, Florida
Sharing at work can be good. Oversharing is not.
  + stars: | 2023-10-01 | by ( Tim Paradis | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +6 min
Yasmin Sampson-Da Rocha pulled the woman into yet another meeting to try to figure out what was going on. Sampson-Da Rocha left the meeting thinking it was time to do a better job of sharing more details about her own life so that those reporting to her could do the same. "It's still such a taboo to say you're struggling in some way," Sampson-Da Rocha told Insider. At work, it let many of us literally see into our colleagues' lives — the good, the bad, and the naked . AdvertisementAdvertisement"I would still take the slightly oversharing versus the someone's struggling at work because they haven't communicated what's going on," she said.
Persons: , Yasmin Sampson, Da Rocha, she'd, Sampson, COVID, it's, isn't, what's, Shannon Duvall, she's, Duvall, couldn't, It's, I've, kinky Organizations: Service, Facebook Locations: Sampson, London
It's not just you. LinkedIn has gotten really weird.
  + stars: | 2023-09-25 | by ( Rob Price | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +19 min
The number of LinkedIn posts grew 41% from 2021 to 2023. A larger rival account emerged, State Of LinkedIn, and a Reddit community thrived — "LinkedIn Lunatics." "Do you realize how dangerous it is to troll via LinkedIn posts? For most people, their LinkedIn posts don't escalate so rapidly. According to Joseph Yeh, a tech recruiter in California who used to work for LinkedIn, revelatory posting is a balancing act.
Persons: Matthew Sciannella, I'm, Sciannella, he'd, Peter Rota, Rota, Xavier Lalanne, There's, Oversharing, Gen, Catalina Valentino, Elon, Sarah Frier, John Hickey, Ted Talkification, you'd, Hickey, Peter Rota's, Hickey wasn't, ominously, Jack Raines, sagely, Alexander Cohen, Cohen's, Raines, Cohen, Jacqueline Rainey —, he's, Young, , , John Reid, Jon Franko, Franko, Instagram, @BestofLinkedIn, Reid, hypocritically, Joseph Yeh, Yeh, Daniel Roth, Fortune, Roth, Sciannella's, didn't, Slack, Franko's, Jameson, who's, He's, Rob Price Organizations: LinkedIn, Facebook, Microsoft, peeing, Economic, Twitter, Bloomberg, Columbia Business School, New York, New York Mets Locations: Washington, DC, Massachusetts, Davos, San Francisco, San Francisco Bay, New York City, Columbia, Manhattan, Bay, Oakland, California
NYU professor Suzy Welch told CNBC that a desire to avoid anxiety was behind the viral "lazy girl jobs" trend. The "lazy girl jobs" trend has gone viral on TikTok, with videos under the #lazygirljobs hashtag racking up more than 17.9 million views since May. TikToker Gabrielle Judge, who popularized the trend, urged her followers to seek out "lazy girl jobs." However, TikTok users — including Judge — have begun warning users to stop sharing their lazy girl jobs online to avoid becoming "socially outcasted," Insider previously reported. Welch's remarks are the latest in the debate over work-life balance stirred up by the lazy girl jobs trend.
Persons: Suzy Welch, somethings, TikTokers, Welch, Jennifer Sotsky, Sotsky, TikToker Gabrielle Judge, Judge, Gabrielle 👸🏻 @ Organizations: CNBC, Service, NYU Stern School of Business Locations: Wall, Silicon
Alix is the creator and star of the HGTV show "Home in a Heartbeat With Galey Alix," which premiered in April and streams on Max. Galey Alix Gravenstein comes from a family of overachievers. Alix got to work with Jay Delgado, remaking Calloway's blank white box into a Galey Alix take on a rich person's beach house. In April 2021, Parker, who had no renovation experience, offered to help Alix with an install. He and Lauren Parker insist Alix is OK because she's able to ask people like them for help without fear.
Persons: Galey Alix, Nancy Meyers, Dale Moss, Alix, semiprivate, fiancé, Goldman Sachs, Joanna Gaines, Drew Scott, Alix gravitates, Jay Delgado, PJ Fetscher, Instagram, she's, she'll, Sonya Revell, , It's, Goldman, I'm, Galey Alix Gravenstein, she'd, Alix didn't, Alix's fiancé, Carrie Calloway, who'd, Mac, Calloway, I'd, Lauren Parker, Parker, Delgado, Fetscher, Kay Marryshow, she's fallible, Phil, Alix's Instagram, it's, She's, Moss, of Moss, he's, Rebecca Zisser, Crystal, Anna Ruiz, Agency Gerard, Ester Gattuso, Susana Betancourt Organizations: grays, Goods, Fort, HGTV, Goldman, Target, University of Florida, Home Depot, Parker, Netflix, Crystal Cox, Agency, Agency Gerard Artists Locations: Italian, Fort Lauderdale, Max, Florida, overachievers, New York, Connecticut, fiancé's Connecticut, Westport , Connecticut, Target, Instagram, Australia, London, India , Puerto Rico, Wyoming, Orlando, peeking
Sarah Wood, 27, says she drank to fit in socially and at work events even as it made her anxious. How stopping drinking affected my work lifeStopping drinking was a personal decision, so I never considered how it might affect my work life. Sobriety made my life at work better tooFeeling as if I could bring my whole self to work and be accepted for it further boosted my confidence. I strongly believe that sobriety has only positively affected my work life. Sobriety hasn't hurt my work life, but that's only my experience.
Persons: Sarah Wood, Wood, , I've, Eager, Goldman Sachs, I'm, hadn't, they'd Organizations: Service, College, Art Basel Locations: New York, New York City, Miami
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