Microsoft halts services to Israeli military unit amid probe into surveillance of Palestinians

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FILE PHOTO: Demonstrators march in support of Palestinians in Gaza near the Microsoft Build conference, during the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, to call for the termination of Microsoft’s Azure contracts with Israel in Seattle, Washington, U.S. May 21, 2024. REUTERS/David Ryder/File Photo

Demonstrators marching to call for the termination of Microsoft’s Azure contracts with Israel.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Microsoft said on Sept 26 that it has disabled some services used by an Israeli military unit after preliminary evidence supported a media investigation that reported mass surveillance of Palestinian phone calls.

A joint investigation published in August by The Guardian and other media outlets found that an Israeli military agency was making use of Microsoft’s Azure software to store countless recordings of mobile phone calls made by Palestinians living in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza.

That prompted an internal review by Microsoft.

“We do not provide technology to facilitate mass surveillance of civilians,” Microsoft president Brad Smith said in a company blog.

The review is ongoing, but details of the Israel Ministry of Defence’s consumption of Azure storage capacity in the Netherlands and the use of artificial intelligence (AI) services supported the Guardian’s reporting, he said.

The decision to “cease and disable” specific subscriptions of the ministry, including the use of specific cloud storage and AI services, would not impact Microsoft’s cyber-security services to Israel and other countries in the Middle East, he added.

At the time the media investigation was published, Israel’s military told The Guardian its work with firms like Microsoft was based on “legally supervised agreements”.

The military later added that Microsoft “is not and has not been working with the (Israeli military) on the storage or processing of data”.

Boycotts and protests

Pro-Palestinian groups such as the Council on American Islamic Relations (Cair) and a tech industry worker-led campaign group named No Azure for Apartheid welcomed the decision.

“This is a welcome step and a point of vindication for those brave tech workers who stood up and protested,”said Mr Imraan Siddiqi, executive director of Cair’s Washington state chapter. The groups have demanded that Microsoft cut all ties with the Israeli government.

Microsoft has been among the most prominent of companies that have faced protests over ties to Israel, as the humanitarian crisis in Gaza from Israel’s military assault has mounted and images of starving Palestinians, including children, have sparked global outrage.

Some recent protests on company premises have led to firings of some employees who took part, including two who joined a sit-in at Mr Smith’s office. Microsoft says the terminations followed breaches of company policies and the on-site demonstrations created what it called significant safety concerns.

The Guardian’s investigation was conducted with Israeli-Palestinian publication +972 Magazine and Hebrew-language outlet Local Call.

Israel’s two-year long assault on Gaza has killed tens of thousands of people and internally displaced Gaza’s entire population. Multiple rights experts, scholars and a UN inquiry say it amounts to genocide. REUTERS

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