
Microsoft 365 atWork; Senior Digital Advisor at Predica Group
In a recent YouTube video, Szymon Bochniak (365 atWork) explains Microsoft’s latest steps to tighten the governance of AI agents inside Microsoft 365. He focuses on updates to the Copilot Control System that let administrators see and manage shareable agents created in Copilot Chat, Copilot Studio, and SharePoint. Consequently, organizations can now control who can share agents and reduce the risk of unchecked agent proliferation. The video arrives as enterprises increasingly deploy autonomous agents for productivity and automation.
Bochniak highlights that administrators now gain centralized oversight of all shareable agents, which makes it easier to set sharing rules across an organization. Moreover, the update introduces controls over who can share agents and how those agents move between users and teams, which helps limit accidental data exposure. As a result, IT teams can balance enabling collaboration with preventing misuse by applying clear policies. This centralization simplifies audits and helps align agent activities with internal policies.
The video calls special attention to Entra Agent ID, a new identity construct designed specifically for agents and similar to managed service identities. For instance, these agent identities have no default privileges and rely on just-in-time access that administrators can grant or revoke automatically, which improves security posture. However, while Entra Agent ID reduces permanent over-permissioning, it also introduces operational complexity around identity lifecycle and policy management. Therefore, teams must weigh stronger controls against the extra effort needed to maintain and audit those identities.
Another theme Bochniak covers is the move toward an Agent Registry, which captures metadata, relationships, and operational context for each agent. This registry model gives organizations a single source of truth for agent attributes and risk signals, thus improving observability as agent counts grow. Nevertheless, running and maintaining a registry brings tradeoffs: it offers richer insight at the cost of additional storage, integration work, and ongoing governance overhead. Consequently, leaders must plan for registry upkeep and determine which metadata are essential to retain clear governance without ballooning complexity.
Importantly, the update extends governance concepts from the Power Platform to agents, making it easier to reuse familiar controls for citizen developers and automation teams. In addition, Copilot Studio ties agent creation back into these governance patterns, enabling organizations to deploy assistants within established compliance frameworks. This integration supports both security and developer productivity, but it can also introduce friction when low-code teams must follow stricter approval flows. Thus, IT must find the right balance to avoid stifling innovation while keeping risk under control.
Bochniak stresses several tradeoffs that organizations face when governing agents: centralized policies can slow deployment, while looser rules increase exposure to data leaks. Furthermore, aligning agent governance with tools like Microsoft Purview and security platforms yields better compliance but requires careful mapping of roles, logs, and audit trails. Equally, discovering agents across diverse surfaces such as Copilot Chat and SharePoint remains a challenge, because some agents run in context-rich environments that complicate monitoring. Consequently, ongoing training, change management, and clear operational playbooks become essential to keep governance effective.
The video recommends several practical moves: start by inventorying existing agents, apply least-privilege policies with Entra Agent ID, and adopt an Agent Registry to track key metadata for audits and risk assessment. Additionally, teams should integrate agent governance with existing compliance and security tools to provide a single pane of glass for risk decisions. Finally, communicate governance decisions to developers and business users to maintain agility while enforcing necessary controls.
Szymon Bochniak’s YouTube update makes clear that Microsoft is improving agent governance across Microsoft 365 by building identity, registry, and platform integrations that prioritize security and visibility. While these changes reduce many risks, they also add operational work and require tradeoffs between speed and control. Therefore, IT leaders should plan for both tooling and process changes so agents can deliver value safely and at scale. Overall, the video offers a practical roadmap for organizations that want to govern AI agents without blocking innovation.
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