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Shield adds Microsoft 365 Copilot & OCR to RegTech Surveillance Stack

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Shield has expanded its communications surveillance platform to cover Microsoft 365 Copilot interactions and image-based content, addressing two areas where financial firms’ working practices have been moving faster than their compliance controls.

The update adds a native Microsoft 365 Copilot connector and OCR text extraction for image attachments. Together, the capabilities bring employee prompts, AI-generated responses, screenshots, scanned documents and photos into the same surveillance, archive, search, case management and export workflows already used for other communications channels.

The development reflects a wider compliance challenge for financial institutions. AI-assisted tools are becoming embedded in daily workflows, while image-based communication has become a routine way of sharing information. In many firms, however, those records have not been captured, indexed or made available for compliance review in the same way as email, chat or other monitored channels.

Shield says its Copilot connector captures employee prompts and AI responses and processes them through the platform’s existing compliance workflow in under 24 hours. Metadata is preserved for audit and investigation, allowing firms to search, review and export Copilot interactions without introducing a separate compliance tool or review process.

The OCR capability applies the same principle to image-based content. Text contained in screenshots, scanned documents and photos is extracted, indexed and analysed. Triggered terms are highlighted inline below the relevant image, making the material searchable for investigation and e-discovery and reducing reliance on manual inspection.

The release comes as firms face growing pressure to extend surveillance across a broader set of communication formats. Shield cites the 1LoD 2026 Surveillance Benchmarking Report, which found that 67 percent of banks regard surveillance across multiple communication channels as a major challenge, while 22 percent now monitor more than 30 channels, compared with 14 percent two years earlier.

Regulatory expectations are also pushing firms towards broader coverage. FINRA Rule 4511 requires member firms to make and preserve required books and records, while FINRA’s 2026 Oversight Report highlights generative AI as an emerging supervisory and compliance issue. In the UK and EU, firms also need to consider how AI-assisted and image-based communications interact with market abuse, supervision and recordkeeping expectations. The FCA has warned that firms with unmonitored risks and no strategic plan to address them are ‘a long way from meeting our expectations.’

“Comprehensive surveillance has always meant capturing everything material to business conduct. But what counts as material is changing — AI-assisted conversations and image-based content are now part of daily workflows at every major financial institution,” said Tamar Sharir Beiser, Chief Product Officer at Shield. “Shield’s role is to ensure that as communication evolves, the compliance infrastructure around it evolves too, so firms are never in a position where their governance framework is trailing their technology adoption.”

For financial firms, the issue is no longer whether AI-assisted conversations and image-based content may fall within the compliance perimeter. The operational challenge is whether those records can be captured, searched, supervised and evidenced without disrupting the tools employees already use.

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