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microsoft 365 licensing
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Discussions on WindowsForum.com about Microsoft 365 licensing focus on how Copilot features are tied to specific license tiers. Recent threads highlight that Copilot Co-Creation in Word on iPhone requires a Microsoft 365 Copilot license, and that Microsoft is rolling back Copilot Chat access for some enterprise customers starting April 2026. These changes show how licensing affects access to AI tools in Office apps like Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. Administrators have controls to manage Copilot availability, but the evolving licensing landscape means users must track which features require paid add-ons versus included access.
Microsoft is pushing Copilot deeper into the everyday Word experience, and the move to Word on iPhone is strategically bigger than it may first appear. The new feature lets users co-create drafts with AI inside the app, but it arrives with clear boundaries: it requires a Microsoft 365 Copilot...
Microsoft’s latest Copilot move is a classic example of how quickly the company is still rewriting its AI playbook. After expanding Copilot Chat into Microsoft 365 apps for commercial users at no extra cost in 2025, Microsoft is now preparing to pull that convenience back for a subset of large...