
""We are exploring the possibility of introducing Copilot for Exchange Server (on-premises)," Microsoft says, linking to a ten-question form that asks: "Would your organization be comfortable enabling Copilot for Exchange Server if it requires sending some Exchange Server data to the cloud?" Er, probably not. After all, many administrators run an on-premises version of Exchange precisely because they don't want any Exchange Server data being sent to Microsoft's cloud."
"While Copilot is not formally planned for the on-premises version of Exchange Server, the direction of travel is clear. The survey asks what capabilities would be useful (such as summarizing emails or monitoring Exchange Server health) and what requirements are non-negotiable, such as regulatory compliance, data boundary assurances, admin-defined restrictions, and complete internet disconnection. The survey offers only three options for current Microsoft 365 Copilot use:"
Microsoft is investigating the possibility of bringing Copilot to on-premises Exchange Server and has circulated a ten-question survey. The survey asks whether organizations would be comfortable enabling Copilot if it required sending some Exchange Server data to the cloud. The questionnaire solicits useful capabilities like email summarization and health monitoring as well as non-negotiable requirements such as regulatory compliance, data boundary assurances, admin-defined restrictions, and complete offline operation. The survey presents only three adoption options and omits an outright refusal choice. The survey does not commit to a rollout but aims to gather administrator feedback.
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