• OT: Mentally ill progressives call for boycott of Microsoft and Xbox

    From CrudeSausage@21:1/5 to All on Mon Apr 7 21:43:59 2025
    XPost: comp.os.linux.advocacy, alt.comp.os.windows-11

    <https://www.rockpapershotgun.com/bds-calls-for-boycott-of-microsoft-and-xbox-gaming-products-over-alleged-israeli-military-connections>

    The international Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement are calling
    on people to cancel Game Pass subscriptions, avoid Microsoft-owned video
    game properties such as Minecraft and Call Of Duty, and boycott all
    Microsoft Gaming and Xbox-branded products in protest at the company’s reported business connections with the Israeli military.

    The call follows allegations this January about the Israeli military’s
    usage of Microsoft’s Azure cloud technology and artificial intelligence products in the course of its bombardment and invasion of Gaza.

    According to a joint investigation between the Guardian,
    Israeli-Palestinian publication +972 Magazine and Hebrew-language outlet
    Local Call, with additional reporting from Drop Site News, Microsoft
    have “deepened” their relationship with Israel’s defence establishment since 7th October 2023, when several Palestinian militant groups struck
    across the border and massacred over a thousand people. Israel responded
    to the attack by mounting a ground offensive and airstrikes that have
    destroyed much of Gaza and killed tens of thousands of Palestinians.

    In their January 2025 write-up, the Guardian claim that Microsoft have
    supplied the Israeli Defense Forces with storage and computing services
    and struck “at least $10m in deals to provide thousands of hours of
    technical support”. The piece continues that “while the IDF has used
    some Microsoft services for administrative purposes, such as email and
    file management systems, documents and interviews suggest Azure has been
    used to support combat and intelligence activities.”

    The joint investigation alleges the use of Microsoft technology by
    Israeli security forces to manage the population registry and movement
    of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza. It further claims that
    Microsoft have supplied a “suite of communications and messaging
    systems” for managing databanks of potential airstrike targets.
    Microsoft have also reportedly given the Israeli military “large-scale access” to OpenAI’s GPT-4 “in recent years”.

    Neither the Israeli military nor Microsoft commented on the Guardian
    report at the time of its publication.

    According to Drop Site, two former Microsoft employees, Abdo Mohamed and
    Hossam Nasr, have been instrumental in driving this week’s BDS call for
    a boycott of Microsoft’s gaming offerings. As reported by the Guardian, Microsoft fired the pair in October 2024 after they organised a vigil
    for Palestinians killed in Gaza outside the company’s headquarters in Redmond, Washington.

    This isn't the first time BDS have protested Microsoft's alleged
    connections to Israeli military or security organisations. In 2020, they
    and other civil liberty groups spoke out against Microsoft's stake in AnyVision, an Israeli start-up whose face recognition technology has
    been used at checkpoints in border crossings between Israel and the West
    Bank. Microsoft later sold their stake and announced that they would
    exit the business of investing in facial recognition startups altogether.

    BDS are now making the games publisher a “priority target” in response
    to this January's allegations. You can read more about the boycott over
    on the BDS website. I've asked Microsoft for comment.

    --
    God be with you,

    CrudeSausage
    John 14:6

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lawrence D'Oliveiro@21:1/5 to All on Tue Apr 8 02:47:07 2025
    XPost: comp.os.linux.advocacy, alt.comp.os.windows-11

    Seems like Microsoft has given up trying with its Windows “handheld mode” idea to compete with the Linux-based Steam Deck. Instead, rumours are now spreading that it is going to come up with some kind of combination Windows+XBox product, maybe later this year.

    This sounds to me like such a pointless product. The whole raison d’être
    why XBox was created in the first place was as a tightly-controlled
    platform that would only run software (mainly games) that Microsoft
    permitted it to run. Whereas Windows was a more laissez-faire playground,
    where users could run pretty much what they wanted, whether it was game or
    not.

    But XBox is not holding its own against the competition (from Sony,
    Nintendo etc) as well as it once was. And the deficiencies of Windows as a gaming platform are starkly highlighted by the Steam Deck, which is popularizing a new way of gaming that Windows is simply unsuited for.

    So what’s Microsoft’s answer? Combine the two losers into one Frankenproduct, in the hope that their individual weaknesses will somehow
    shore each other up, instead of bringing each other down. It’s an act of desperation, with no clear strategy behind it. A swan song for XBox? Does
    seem like it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From CrudeSausage@21:1/5 to Lawrence D'Oliveiro on Tue Apr 8 08:38:16 2025
    XPost: comp.os.linux.advocacy, alt.comp.os.windows-11

    On 2025-04-07 10:47 p.m., Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
    Seems like Microsoft has given up trying with its Windows “handheld mode” idea to compete with the Linux-based Steam Deck. Instead, rumours are now spreading that it is going to come up with some kind of combination Windows+XBox product, maybe later this year.

    The other rumours are that the Xbox will allow for people to sync their
    Steam libraries onto the Xbox. For me, that would be awesome. It would
    kill the requirement to use Windows to play the games.

    This sounds to me like such a pointless product. The whole raison d’être why XBox was created in the first place was as a tightly-controlled
    platform that would only run software (mainly games) that Microsoft
    permitted it to run. Whereas Windows was a more laissez-faire playground, where users could run pretty much what they wanted, whether it was game or not.

    But XBox is not holding its own against the competition (from Sony,
    Nintendo etc) as well as it once was. And the deficiencies of Windows as a gaming platform are starkly highlighted by the Steam Deck, which is popularizing a new way of gaming that Windows is simply unsuited for.

    So what’s Microsoft’s answer? Combine the two losers into one Frankenproduct, in the hope that their individual weaknesses will somehow shore each other up, instead of bringing each other down. It’s an act of desperation, with no clear strategy behind it. A swan song for XBox? Does seem like it.

    The Xbox 360 was Microsoft's best chance to take over the gaming market,
    but the unit's unreliability killed the momentum. The Xbox One not being
    more powerful than the PS4 destroyed whatever hope holdouts had that the
    Xbox would become #1. I'm an Xbox guy myself, if only because I
    recognize that Microsoft was the innovator in what I most appreciate in
    gaming: achievements. The Xbox One never died on me and the Xbox Series
    S is still going strong. The fact that it is in a distant third place
    doesn't bother me one bit. However, giving us access to Steam within the
    Xbox will make things a lot more competitive.


    --
    God be with you,

    CrudeSausage
    John 14:6

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lawrence D'Oliveiro@21:1/5 to CrudeSausage on Tue Apr 8 21:10:32 2025
    XPost: comp.os.linux.advocacy, alt.comp.os.windows-11

    On Tue, 8 Apr 2025 08:38:16 -0400, CrudeSausage wrote:

    The other rumours are that the Xbox will allow for people to sync their
    Steam libraries onto the Xbox. For me, that would be awesome. It would
    kill the requirement to use Windows to play the games.

    How do you think that would work? How would Steam games work without a
    full functioning Windows API, à la WINE/Proton?

    However, giving us access to Steam within the Xbox will make things a
    lot more competitive.

    Competitive with what? Those games were not written for the console
    market, they were written for the PC market. The whole point with having consoles is so user don’t have to mess with PCs to run the games. And the whole point with having PC games is for those who don’t want to put up
    with the strictures of consoles.

    What does combining the two achieve? There is a marketing term called “synergy” that should apply here. But it doesn’t.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)