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Microsoft

Microsoft Halts All New Sales in Russia (techcrunch.com) 73

Microsoft is "suspending" all new sales of products and services in Russia, and is halting "many aspects" of its business in the country to honor US, UK and EU sanctions. The move comes days after Microsoft restricted Russian state media across its platforms, and after Ukraine's Vice Prime Minister called on the company to block Russian Xbox accounts. From a report: Microsoft saw the withdrawal as virtually necessary. "Concrete steps" like this would have the most impact, according to company president Brad Smith, and there will be "additional steps" as the Ukraine situation develops.
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Microsoft Halts All New Sales in Russia

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  • All Windows accounts present in Russia should be deactivated. That could get interesting fast...

    • Looks like you trying to dance with nuclear war, do you need some help? Turn on clippy, add some snark, and remove the off switch. And set spell check to change every occurrence of Putin to "man with small penis" or Trump-fuhrer.

    • All Windows accounts present in Russia should be deactivated. That could get interesting fast...

      Such a move - and/or similar interpretations of the sanctions by even a few other companies or government regulaters forcing it - could make "Software as a service" and "web service" business models into casualties of the Russia-Ukrane war.

      Indeed, just the realization that this is possible might be enough to start businesses switching from proprietary software products to open-source and in-house tooling.

      Perhaps

    • All Windows accounts present in Russia should be deactivated. That could get interesting fast...

      There's levels of integrity at play in the Russian sanctions.

      If you do something I don't like, it's completely reasonable for me to turn my back and not interact with you further. It's a principled stance, and tells the world I don't like what you've done.

      If you do something I don't like, and I start breaking promises and agreements I've previously made, to you, then that reflects badly on me. It shows the world "I break promises". It doesn't matter if the reasoning is sound, or even if the world would agre

      • by kmoser ( 1469707 )
        Microsoft never promised that they *wouldn't* target special (wink wink) Windows Updates to all Russian-based IP addresses.

        In any case, any Windows license that Microsoft grants, Microsoft can revoke. Haven't you read the EULA?
    • Yo! Red Flag Linux! :-)
    • Yep. I was just about to say the same. Now that most Windows workstations are always connected via the Microsoft account, it would be a matter of a simple licence revocation. As much as I hate the youve-got-to-have-an-account model deployed by Microsoft, this would be an awesome use case and it would hurt A LOT!

  • According to the most recent BSA Global Software Survey in 2018 ( https://gss.bsa.org/wp-content... [bsa.org] ), Russia is reported to be at 62% percent unlicensed software. Russia continues to account for the largest dollar share of unlicensed software in Central and Eastern Europe.

    This is just going to further drive this figure upward.

    • Windows is not really the concern here; Microsoft is also halting the sales of services.

      Combined with Oracle's recent announcement [reuters.com], this means that Russia is quickly getting cut from global cloud services, on which they rely a whole lot.

    • as such, the very purpose of closed source and copyrighted software? to have more control it situations like this one?

      • Closed services have been a part of the computing world a lot longer than open platforms. Heck, back in the day, the big tech companies like IBM literally had a man on site at all mainframe installations, to manage the systems. Cloud computing isn't some sort of revolution, it's a return to the old time sharing systems of days of yore.

        • if you get a bunch of rfc's over mainframe standards together you will see cloud computing from the corner of your eye.

        • Closed services have been a part of the computing world a lot longer than open platforms. Heck, back in the day, the big tech companies like IBM literally had a man on site at all mainframe installations, to manage the systems.

          As I understand it, the customer engineer was mainly a hardware guy (although in those days the division wasn't all that great and he was REALLY the rep-on-the-spot for everything).

          But there was plenty of free and open-sourced software circulating, among the user groups (which also se

  • Once freed from the shackles of Windows and Office, Russia will be dominating the IT world!

    • then we will finally see that fork of linux i've been hearing about coming from that block of nations or at least that superior distro to lead said charge.

      • then we will finally see that fork of linux i've been hearing about coming from that block of nations or at least that superior distro to lead said charge.

        Also: China has one already, so they're all set should they pull the trigger on Taiwan.

        (Loaded with spyware, of course, but hey, that's totalitarianism for you.)

        China's move on Taiwan was believed to be ready to go but is now (at least) delayed while they assess the unexpectedly strong international reaction to Russia's move on Ukrane.

        • (Loaded with spyware, of course, but hey, that's totalitarianism for you.)

          So, they won;'t have to worry about the NSA links to Microsoft, Google, Facewank, etc any more. [sad face]

          • (Loaded with spyware, of course, but hey, that's totalitarianism for you.)

            So, they won;'t have to worry about the NSA links to Microsoft, Google, Facewank, etc any more. [sad face]

            Like I said: "... hey, that's totalitarianism for you." B-b

      • by kmoser ( 1469707 )
        In Soviet Russia, 2022 really is Year of Linux Desktop, Comrade!
  • cut off office/ms 365 and azure there

  • A country at war asking to block accounts of a game console? I wasn't aware gamers were that dangerous
    • Popular support for a war is crucial for drawn-out affairs, so targeting public morale through propaganda and...this...is just one more attack vector. Now whether the war will become drawn-out or not should already have been determined by the Russian strategists, but we'll see. No doubt China is watching this war closely to see what factors come to play with international interdependence on IT and other assets.
    • A country at war asking to block accounts of a game console? I wasn't aware gamers were that dangerous

      Most modern multiplayer games have text or even voice chat between players. It would also seem that it is difficult to block (at least without being obvious or blocking other things). Putin doesn't want the Russian people to get any news about what's really going on. Getting Microsoft to block the accounts would make it look to Russian gamers like it was just more sanctions from the west.rather than an at

  • M$ should prevent all machines in Russia from receiving software patches for their machines. As a result, they'll all be much more vulnerable than usual within a week. And even more so the week after and so on.
    • by Rozzin ( 9910 )

      M$ should prevent all machines in Russia from receiving software patches for their machines. As a result, they'll all be much more vulnerable than usual within a week. And even more so the week after and so on.

      Well, given how badly Windows sometimes breaks because of Microsoft's updates, maybe it would be better for them to keep pushing updates to their enemies.

    • M$ should prevent all machines in Russia from receiving software patches for their machines. As a result, they'll all be much more vulnerable than usual within a week. And even more so the week after and so on.

      I love this idea! Do you have a newsletter I could subscribe to?and DNS of .ru. Am

    • I'd imagine that most Russian government offices already disabled automated Microsoft updates a few weeks ago, in order to prevent the US government from installing backdoors into their systems as a software patch.

  • Azure, GCP, AWS and DNS of .ru. Amazon, faebook, twitter, apple, google. Everything

  • Who do I have to invade to get rid of Windows?

  • Shut off support.

    I know other tech companies have done so.

  • This place is dead. I am saddened and disappointed not to see comment after comment of "In Soviet Russia, ...". I mean, Jesus Christ it's ripe for it. It should be run into the ground at this point. Did all the old guard die off from the beetus?

    I will get us started.

    In Soviet Russia, Microsoft firewall YOU.

  • Linux on (Russian) Desktop could be the side-effect if the current Windows authentication is shut down (if that happens).

  • Microsoft could replace the automated background on the log on screen to show some photos of people hiding in basements etc for every Windows install with a Russian IP address.
  • Extremely bold of Microsoft to announce their support of Russia like this.

  • blocking Microsoft365 would immediately cause a few headaches

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