Every week gives us a chance to pause, reset, and take one small step that strengthens the systems around us — the routines, habits, and relationships that quietly shape our lives. Progress rarely arrives as a dramatic leap. More often, it’s the quiet decision to learn something new, fix something small, or pay attention to the world with a little more curiosity.
Technology keeps accelerating, but the human part of the equation stays the same: clarity, intention, and the courage to keep moving forward.
With that spirit, here’s what shaped the tech world this week.
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⚙️ This Week in Tech
Microsoft Copilot Studio expands into VS Code
Microsoft released the Copilot Studio extension for Visual Studio Code, giving developers a more integrated way to build and customize AI workflows directly inside the editor.
This is part of a broader trend: AI tools are no longer “add‑ons” — they’re becoming part of the core development environment.
Verizon outage traced to software issue
A nationwide Verizon wireless outage hit millions of users before the company confirmed it was caused by a software issue, not an attack.
It’s a reminder that even the biggest networks can stumble from simple code failures.
Windows 11 shutdown bug after January update
Microsoft’s January 13 update triggered a strange bug: some Windows 11 PCs refuse to shut down or hibernate, instead restarting automatically.
A fix is expected soon, but it highlights how fragile OS‑level changes can be.
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🛡️ Cybersecurity & Hacking News
Two Chrome extensions caught stealing AI chat data
Security researchers uncovered two malicious Chrome extensions posing as AI helpers that were secretly stealing ChatGPT and DeepSeek conversations from over 900,000 users.
This is one of the largest AI‑related data theft incidents so far — and a warning that browser extensions remain a major attack vector.
Operation Endgame: Arrest at Schiphol Airport
Dutch police arrested the alleged operator of AVCheck, a malware‑testing service used by cybercriminals, as part of the global Operation Endgame crackdown.
This operation continues to dismantle the infrastructure behind long‑running malware campaigns.
New PayPal invoice scam
A new PayPal scam sends legitimate‑looking invoices with fake support numbers to trick users into calling attackers.
Because the invoices come from PayPal’s own system, they bypass many spam filters.
FortiSIEM vulnerability actively exploited
A critical Fortinet FortiSIEM command‑injection flaw (CVE‑2025‑64155) is now being actively exploited in the wild.
Organizations running FortiSIEM are urged to patch immediately.
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🌱 Closing Thought
The world is noisy, fast, and full of surprises — but every week offers a chance to build something steady. Whether it’s learning a new tool, tightening your digital security, or simply taking a breath before the next step, the small moves matter.
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