I'm confused over what anyone means when they say "Copilot", since it could mean the VS Code editor features or various features on github.com or the thing that Microsoft sell as part of their 365 office software.
Don't forget about the Copilot in Windows, which is different from the Copilot in Bing, which is different from Copilot in Edge, which is different from the Copilot in Copilot Studio... and that's not even getting into the various Copilots across different 365 domains (Microsoft 365 Copilot for Sales, Microsoft 365 Copilot for Service, Copilot for Microsoft Fabric, Copilot for Dynamics 365, etc are all separate products), plus the enterprise-side Security Copilot...
Good old Microsoft naming. I'll never understand how they can think it's a good idea to release multiple entirely different products and call them all variations of the same thing. One would think they would have solved this problem a decade ago and yet every few years it happens again.
At the top-right of that page, it has a little icon indicating 'enterprise data protection' but I can't see any way for me (the user) to know what type of Copilot licence (if any) the accountholder has assigned to my user account.
If you have the fancy copilot pro, you'll see it in the rest of your office account, such as outlook, where additional features are available such as email summarize etc.
I think this article is about the 365 suite.