Inside the Microsoft protests: Fired engineer speaks out on Palestine, Israel, AI, and big tech
A wave of protests has swept through Microsoft events in recent months, targeting the company’s cloud and AI contracts with the Israeli military. The campaign — organized by a group called No Azure for Apartheid — includes current and former Microsoft employees who want the company to end the contracts. They argue that Microsoft’s technologies are being used in ways that contribute to human rights abuses against Palestinians in Gaza. Demonstrations have taken place at major company gatherings, including the Build developer conference and Microsoft’s internal 50th anniversary event. “The point is not to disrupt,” says Hossam Nasr, one of… Read More


A wave of protests has swept through Microsoft events in recent months, targeting the company’s cloud and AI contracts with the Israeli military.
The campaign — organized by a group called No Azure for Apartheid — includes current and former Microsoft employees who want the company to end the contracts. They argue that Microsoft’s technologies are being used in ways that contribute to human rights abuses against Palestinians in Gaza.
Demonstrations have taken place at major company gatherings, including the Build developer conference and Microsoft’s internal 50th anniversary event.
“The point is not to disrupt,” says Hossam Nasr, one of the organizers of the group, on a new episode of the GeekWire Podcast. “The point is, ultimately, to make it untenable to be complicit in the genocide.”
He added that the protests would stop immediately if Microsoft made what he called a basic moral choice, to terminate its contracts with the Israeli military.
These statements — and other parts of our conversation — underscored the deep divide over these issues. A United Nations panel and the International Court of Justice have said there is a plausible case that Israel’s actions in Gaza could meet the legal definition of genocide. Israel categorically rejects that, saying it is waging a war of self-defense against Hamas.
In response to the broader concerns raised by protesters, Microsoft said in a May 15 statement that internal and external reviews had “found no evidence to date that Microsoft’s Azure and AI technologies have been used to target or harm people in the conflict in Gaza.”
Microsoft acknowledged it does not have full visibility into how customers operate their own servers or use third-party technologies.
But the company says it has complied with its human rights commitments, and that its contracts with Israel’s Ministry of Defense are standard commercial agreements, governed by its terms of service and AI Code of Conduct.
As you can probably tell by now, this episode is unlike any we’ve done before. It touches on some of the most contentious and disputed issues in the industry, and in the world more broadly.
It started with my curiosity and desire to learn more about after the group protested at GeekWire’s independent Microsoft @ 50 event in March. I was on stage interviewing Microsoft Vice Chair and President Brad Smith when the conversation was interrupted by Nasr, the first of three people who protested inside the event.
After covering Microsoft’s statements and the group’s response — and seeing the continued protests unfold — I decided to dig deeper and learn more. As part of that, I invited Nasr to join me on this podcast.
Nasr is a software engineer who was fired by Microsoft last year related to protests on the Microsoft campus, for what the company described as violations of its policies designed to prevent workplace disruption.
What followed was a complex and at times intense conversation — one that went beyond Microsoft’s role into a broader discussion of Israel’s actions in Gaza.
These are deeply polarizing issues, and we know there are strong, divergent opinions about them. I’ve added context conveying Microsoft’s responses, and noted areas where statements and characterizations about Israel, Palestine, and Gaza are the subject of dispute.
Please note: The conversation includes detailed descriptions of the ongoing conflict in Gaza and some historical comparisons that some listeners may find disturbing or offensive. And lastly, we recorded this conversation in late May, before the latest developments in the Middle East.
Listen above, or subscribe to GeekWire on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
Related Links:
Microsoft: Statement on the Issues Relating to Technology Services in Israel and Gaza
Associated Press: As Israel uses US-made AI models in war, concerns arise about tech’s role in who lives and who dies
AP: Microsoft fires employees who organized vigil for Palestinians killed in Gaza
+972: Leaked documents expose deep ties between Israeli army and Microsoft
The Verge: Microsoft blocks emails that contain ‘Palestine’ after employee protests
Guardian: Microsoft deepened ties with Israeli military to provide tech support during Gaza war
Audio editing by Curt Milton.