Microsoft is facing new pushback over the Israeli military's use of its AI and cloud products, as a group of more than 60 shareholders have filed a proposal calling on the company to publish a report assessing the effectiveness of its "human rights due diligence [HRDD] processes in preventing, identifying, and addressing customer misuse of Microsoft artificial intelligence and cloud products or services that violates human rights or international humanitarian law."
"Microsoft [[link]] states it conducts ongoing HRDD across its value chain, in line with its obligations under the UNGPs, but it neither explains its HRDD processes related to [[link]] customer end use, nor reports on their effectiveness," the resolution states. "Recent allegations of severe customer misuse suggest Microsoft’s HRDD may be ineffective.
"In the face of serious allegations of complicity in genocide and other international crimes, Microsoft’s HRDD processes appear ineffective. Microsoft recently published a statement responding to these allegations, explaining it conducted an internal review and commissioned a third-party firm to 'undertake additional fact-finding,' and concluding it '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.'
"The statement provides no additional information on the nature of the assessments, the definition of 'harm,' nor the identity of the external firm. Notably, the statement admits a significant gap in Microsoft’s HRDD: 'Microsoft does not have visibility into how customers use our software on their own servers or other devices'."
But as Israel's brutal assault against Gaza has raged on, , many have come to believe that concerns for international law have fallen by the wayside. A , for instance, found in October 2024 that "Israel has perpetrated a concerted policy to destroy Gaza’s healthcare system as part of a broader assault on Gaza, committing war crimes and the crime against humanity of extermination with relentless and deliberate attacks on medical personnel and facilities."
The ongoing bloodshed, and growing awareness of Microsoft's entanglements with the Israeli military, has drawn criticism and sparked protest, including from its own employees. In April, former Microsoft employee —she was for her actions—interrupted the company's 50th anniversary celebration to demand Microsoft "stop using AI for genocide"; occurred both inside and outside Microsoft's Build conference in May. Art rock legend Brian Eno, creator of the Windows 95 startup jingle, also in May, with a pointed statement calling on Microsoft to sever its ties with Israel: "If you knowingly build systems that can enable war crimes, you inevitably become complicit in those crimes."
Today's resolution represents an escalation of those protests. The shareholders involved represent more than $80 million worth of Microsoft shares, which is both an awful lot of money but also a tiny slice of Microsoft's total valuation. But Rewan Haddad, campaign director at consumer watchdog organization Eko, said the number and diversity of co-filers attached to the resolution—the largest number of co-filers on a single Microsoft shareholders resolution ever, according to the org— "shows the scale of shareholder frustration with Microsoft."