Microsoft Israel chief leaves amid ethical controversy

(en.globes.co.il)

150 points | by bhouston 6 hours ago ago

58 comments

  • noworriesnate 5 hours ago ago

    TIL that Microsoft is the least Israel-friendly of the big three clouds:

    > Among the cloud giants, Microsoft is considered the most vulnerable to anti-Israel protests and allegations of the use made by the Ministry of Defense on Azure, its cloud platforms, since it is the only company among the three major cloud companies that has not signed a special agreement with the Israeli government and the Ministry of Defense. The industry says that Haimovich, who is known as a prominent salesman with the government sector, was appointed country general manager, among other things, due to Microsoft's plans to retain and increase business with the government sector, despite not winning the Nimbus tender.

    > In 2021, Israel awarded Amazon and Google the Nimbus cloud tender, encouraging government bodies and public organizations to migrate to these services, at the expense of Microsoft. In return, Amazon and Google pledged to establish service areas in data centers on Israeli soil, in order to avoid exposing security or government data to foreign regulation.

    • bhouston 4 hours ago ago

      > TIL that Microsoft is the least Israel-friendly of the big three clouds

      This is a good thing.

      American companies should not be allowing their tech to be used to in the gross ongoing human rights violations in Israel/Gaza/West Bank.

      Google and Amazon knew their tech could be used for human rights abuses in Israel (their lawyers warned them so) but ignored that in favour of $$$ per the EFF:

      https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/04/google-and-amazon-ackn...

      • ApolloFortyNine 3 hours ago ago

        Thanks for the link, I didn't realize the EFF spent their money on such things. I honestly thought they focused on free speech/privacy/open source.

        I'm not trying to argue pro Israel or what not, I just wish they'd focus on their core mission.

        • sdellis 2 hours ago ago

          The EFF's mission is to ensure that technology supports freedom, justice, and innovation for all people of the world. That is verbatim off their website. It appears that this perfectly in line with their core mission.

        • 4MOAisgoodenuf 3 hours ago ago

          Somewhat hard to be neutral when outgrowths of the Israeli state like the NSO Group and Canary Mission start taking a stand against privacy and free speech

        • anon84873628 12 minutes ago ago

          Well, reporting the largest abuses of non-free software companies could be seen as a corollary to that.

        • exolymph 2 hours ago ago

          Every nonprofit is eventually recruited for the omnicause because that's what the people who tend to work at nonprofits want.

          • sdellis 2 hours ago ago

            This comment makes it sound like you are trying to belittle people who work at nonprofits to make yourself feel better about putting profits over people.

          • nelox 2 hours ago ago

            This is the correct answer

        • starefossen an hour ago ago

          Freedom is literally in their name. Can it be more core than that?

        • SilverElfin an hour ago ago

          Yep. These nonprofits have a tendency of being abused for the personal causes of their staff. Clearly this isn’t part of their mission unless you go through some mental gymnastics.

      • ToucanLoucan 4 hours ago ago

        > American companies should not be allowing their tech to be used to in the gross ongoing human rights violations in Israel/Gaza/West Bank.

        Fully agreed, but also a hard sell given that America itself does not recognize what is happening there as a genocide.

        Something something man understanding depending on his salary.

        Americans only give a shit about the price of gas and eggs. Whoever has to die to keep those down is apparently fine with the majority of our population.

        • bhouston 4 hours ago ago

          > Fully agreed, but also a hard sell given that America itself does not recognize what is happening there as a genocide.

          This has nothing to do with a declaration of genocide. Both Amazon and Google respectively have made commitments to not enable human rights violations:

          https://sustainability.aboutamazon.com/human-rights/principl...

          https://about.google/company-info/human-rights/

          • ToucanLoucan 4 hours ago ago

            Well clearly they didn't mean much, which is about what I expect from any corporate policy declaration such as. If you believed them anyway, congratulations on having far more faith in corporations than I do.

        • stasomatic 4 hours ago ago

          Like... all of us 300 million plus? Thanks dude.

          • XorNot an hour ago ago

            In a practical sense the voting majority of you all demonstrated that, and the rest of you are going along with it.

            • stasomatic an hour ago ago

              I agree, water is wet. Got anything else?

      • yodsanklai 4 hours ago ago

        > American companies should not be allowing their tech to ...

        Do they have a choice?

        • idle_zealot 4 hours ago ago

          In what dimension do you mean? Legally? Yes, unless based out of a place with an anti-BDS law. Politically? Sure, it's a bet against those currently in power and for the sentiment in the population. Practically? Yes, they can refuse business and contracts. I suppose they could also put killswitches in their hardware/software, but I wouldn't be a fan of that for digital-rights reasons. Economically? Who knows, the market makes no sense at all currently. They could probably get away with whatever.

    • shrubble 3 hours ago ago

      I’m kind of confused, in that Israel is not that big in terms of population, about 10 million people; how much data and cloud do they need?

      The state of Pennsylvania is 13 million; would MSFT losing PA do them serious financial damage?

      • j_maffe 2 hours ago ago

        When you're doing mass surveilance, including storing every single phone call, of a population of 6 million people, storage needs tend to pile up quite fast.

      • 0xbadcafebee an hour ago ago

        Israel is essentially fighting wars on multiple fronts at all times. Since they are so small and vulnerable, they have to lean more on intelligence. As a result they have the most advanced intelligence apparatus in the world, far beyond US intelligence for example. Part of their intelligence strategy, clearly, is advanced use of technology & data collection/mining/analytics. So they're gonna end up with a lot of data.

    • hersko 5 hours ago ago

      Is it because it is the most "woke"? Weren't they doing land acknowledgments before some big press event?

      • cyanydeez 5 hours ago ago

        No, it's just a random coin toss. Most of what's happening with rich people becoming psychotic or anti-social is simply greed based. You add money to 70% of the population and they'll turn out to be an asshole.

        If Microsoft was given more attention by AIPAC or it's billionaires, it would've been the same.

        Watching the rise of fascism in america should really remind everyone that theres far more going on then a single idiot driving far right fascism.

      • noworriesnate 4 hours ago ago

        Being anti-Israel is a bipartisan position in the US among the constituents but not among the representatives (yet)

        • idle_zealot 3 hours ago ago

          There's bipartisan consensus among both constituents and representatives. They're just the opposite consensus.

        • WarmWash 2 hours ago ago

          Ehhh, people the on right hate Israel because they are Jewish and people on the left hate Israel because they are the oppressors in the conflict.

          Maybe there is some solidarity but rightoids love oppressors and lefties love non-discrimination.

    • shimman 4 hours ago ago

      That must explain why the "least" friendly MSFT asked the FBI to spy on employees attending pro-Gaza/anti-genocide protests:

      https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/latest-news/microsof...

      Good grief. Let's maybe not parrot out nation state propaganda with zero critical thinking on what's being said.

      • george916a 4 hours ago ago

        Of course. Instead let’s call TikTok propaganda “critical thinking”, virtue signal and be content how “smart” and “moral” we are.

  • bhouston 4 hours ago ago

    For those that do not know, this is part of the fallout of this Microsoft investigation from 2025 into the misuse of Azure services in Israel for military purposes:

    https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2025/09/microsoft-blo...

  • jksmith 3 hours ago ago

    MSFT won't sign non-disclosures, but they have policies regarding not using your data to train their models. Just trust them if you want to use azure -except for that rogue employee part I guess.

  • Animats 5 hours ago ago

    So Israel is switching to Google and Amazon. Hm.

  • aaa_aaa 4 hours ago ago

    Too little too late.

  • tradethedelta 5 hours ago ago

    Israel consistently flaunts international law, has been accused of war crimes by the Hague, and the UN has found it most likely has committed and continues to commit genocide in Gaza. So I am not surprised that dealing with the country's Defense apparatus would lead to ethical concerns. Every international company should think twice about doing business with the Israeli government or companies rooted in defense and cybersecurity.

  • basisword 5 hours ago ago

    >> Alon Haimovich is leaving after an investigation into alleged unethical use of Azure by the Ministry of Defense, “Globes” has learned. Microsoft Israel has been placed under the management of Microsoft France.

  • rolymath 5 hours ago ago

    What exactly did he do?

    • danudey 4 hours ago ago

      Allowed 'unethical' usage of Azure services by the Ministry of Defense

      (...to occur on servers in the European Union, where Microsoft could get in trouble for it)

  • shevy-java 4 hours ago ago

    > In September 2025, Microsoft decided to unilaterally terminate the usage agreement with IDF intelligence Unit 8200 after an article published in the UK newspaper "The Guardian," which claimed that the unit was collecting information about Palestinians for the purpose of fighting terrorism

    Ok but ... isn't Microsoft forced, by law, to cooperate with the US government and US military? So why is that then not an ethical (or other) issue?

    To me this seems inconsistent. The only "necessity" I see is for Microsoft to be penalised by EU laws, which could explain that "investigation" to some extent. But the EU in general is super-weak. They even give data from EU citizens to the US government as-is, without any problem, so I don't quite buy into that explanation. Is there another explanation that makes more sense?

  • Fando 3 hours ago ago

    ~28,000 Gaza children murdered in 2 years by Israeli gov. About 68,000 people are officially confirmed killed. 70% of all casualties are women and children. "Western liberal democracies", especially the US gov, are up to their necks in blood, as usual. Microsoft is no different, its only concern is to avoid legal trouble and uphold the facade of legal obligation, otherwise business as usual with Israeli gov. In any category of violence, the US gov, is the undisputed record holder since WW2 - wars of aggression started, proxy wars started, democracies overthrown, dictatorships established, terrorist groups created, funded and armed, resources plundered, economies impoverished, tens of millions of civilians displaced, maimed and murdered. US citizens have a duty to learn about the actual history of their country, and the elite uni-party mafia criminals in charge of it, not just what is shown to them on CNN, FOX, NYT, WSJ, etc. Read books by Michael Parenti, like, Face of Imperialism, as a starting point.

    • Mr_Bees69 3 hours ago ago

      Well, lets check Mr.Parenti's wikipedia page. "Education and early life", "Career", "Personal life and death", "Works". I wonder what's under works? "Accusations of Bosnian genocide denial"! How fun!

  • deaux 5 hours ago ago

    Lovely, but in character, to see a .co.il 403-block a broad swath of the world.

    • dang 2 hours ago ago

      I don't know what you're experiencing, of course, but I do know from the (entirely different) context of running HN that such blocks can happen for a lot of different reasons and you can't really assess them correctly without, at least, multiple data points. Not sure if it's helpful to say this or not...

  • tinfoilhatter 3 hours ago ago

    Israel has been leaking US state secrets to China and Russia for decades. Intel and Microsoft both moved core R&D hubs to Israel even after the country had been caught leaking US secrets. Israel is not an ally of the United States, end of story.

  • computerex 5 hours ago ago

    Okay, now I will be supporting Azure products and will try to bring them into my workplace over AWS/Google Cloud.

    • orochimaaru 4 hours ago ago

      Why? Microsoft probably just hasn’t prioritized nimbus participation over their other construction work. They probably haven’t yet constructed the correct subsidiary structure or key sharing agreements that allow them to participate either.

      Sooner or later they’ll participate. And then you would have moved your workload for no reason.

    • pnemonic 4 hours ago ago

      I wouldn't be so sure. The departure of these guys only opens new room for less 'pro-ethics' corpos to replace them.

    • danudey 4 hours ago ago

      The reason cited for this whole fiasco is that some of the Ministry of Defense's genocide work could be performed by servers in the EU, which could expose Microsoft to legal or regulatory issues.

      It's not that Microsoft was against this, it's that Microsoft was against themselves getting in trouble for this with the EU.

      • j_maffe 2 hours ago ago

        Well they did put in their contracts with the Israeli government that their services can't be used for mass surveilance which makes them slightly less evil than Google/Amazon.