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18 protesters arrested at Microsoft HQ
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18 protesters arrested at Microsoft HQ

by admin August 22, 2025


18 members of the pro-Palestinian group No Azure for Apartheid were arrested while protesting Microsoft’s business ties with Israel.

The arrests took place on August 20, 2025, during the second day of No Azure for Apartheid protests at Microsoft’s HQ in Redmond, Washington.

Microsoft workers, former workers, and pro-Palestinian community members re-established a “Liberation Zone” in Microsoft’s East Campus Plaza (referred to by the group as the Martyred Palestinian Children’s Plaza) after being dispersed by police on August 19, 2025.

According to an Instagram post by No Azure for Apartheid, published August 21, 2025, protestors had “set up tents, displayed art to honor Palestinian martyrs, and gave speeches about Microsoft’s complicity in the surveillance and genocide of Palestinians.”

The protest escalated around 12:15pm, however, with No Azure for Apartheid claiming Microsoft and Redmond Police retaliated against its “peaceful opposition of war crimes” with “the brutal mass arrest of 18 protestors, chemical weapons, and physical violence.”

“Current workers, former workers, and community members were hog-tied, violently dragged around, and pepper-sprayed in a repressive escalation,” the group claimed on Instagram.

“Microsoft and Redmond Police chose to dehumanize, brutalize, and criminalize people of conscience for opposing Microsoft’s actual war crimes.”

The statement continued: “Despite today’s brutal repression, let us be clear: no violence will successfully shut down escalation efforts against Microsoft’s complicity in war crimes.The Worker Intifada is an answer to Gaza’s call for action, and so The Worker Intifada will live on.”

In an X post on August 21, 2025, Redmond police confirmed the 18 arrests and claimed that after initially attempting to “trespass the protestors,” they “resisted and became aggressive.”

The police department went on to claim that “a few protestors had poured paint over the Microsoft sign and on the ground,” while “others had blocked a pedestrian bridge and were using stolen tables and chairs from vendors to form a barrier.”

The 18 arrests were allegedly for “multiple charges, including trespassing, malicious mischief, resisting arrest, and obstruction,” but Redmond police claim “no injuries were reported.”

“As we have made clear, Microsoft is committed to its human rights standards and contractual terms of service, including in the Middle East,” a Microsoft spokesperson said in a statement to Komo News.

“The company announced last week that it is pursuing a thorough and independent review of new allegations first reported earlier this month about the purported use of its Azure platform in Israel.”

No Azure for Apartheid is a “movement of Microsoft workers demanding that Microsoft end its direct and indirect complicity in Israeli apartheid and genocide.”

The group specifically demands Microsoft “cut ties with Israel,” calls for an “end to the genocide and forced starvation” in Palestine, pays “reparations to the Palestinians”, and ends “the discrimination against workers.”

Over 2,000 Microsoft workers have signed the No Azure for Apartheid petition, which demands the tech giant “cut all [its] ties with the Israeli Army,” and that the company conducts “a third-party independent audit of our contract, services and product to make sure they are not involved in any human right violation, be it in Gaza, or elsewhere.”

Earlier this month, Arkane Studios STJV union members voiced their support for the group and the petition in an open letter to Microsoft and the heads of its subsidiaries.

In May, Microsoft conducted an internal review following claims that its Azure and AI technologies were being used by the Israel Ministry of Defence (IMOD) “to target civilians or cause harm in the conflict in Gaza.”

At the time, Microsoft acknowledged it provides the IMOD with “software, professional services, Azure cloud and AI services,” but claimed its review found “no evidence to date” that these technologies “have been used to target or harm people” in the ongoing Gaza conflict.

In a recent statement, No Azure for Apartheid refuted Microsoft’s claims and explained that it is protesting at Microsoft HQ to “escalate against Microsoft’s active role in powering 22 months of genocide in Palestine.”

“For 22 months, Microsoft enabled, accelerated, and profited off the genocide while repeatedly silencing and retaliating against its workers who spoke up against its immoral and illegal genocide-profiteering business practices,” the statement reads.

“The amount of evidence has become insurmountable; the disruptions have become non-stop; and the worker pressure has reached a tipping point. Still, Microsoft and its executives refuse to listen to its workers’ demands and continue to hide behind desperate PR statements and sham investigations.”

It added: “It has become clear to us: Microsoft’s claims of being a moral company are a facade. They will not change their ways because it is the right thing to do; they will continue to exploit our labor to directly enable apartheid, power genocide through tech weapons in the form of Cloud and AI, and abet the starvation campaign in Gaza; in other words, they will only divest from the economy of occupation and genocide when not doing so hurts their bottom line.

“That’s why, today, we join the long tradition of workers who have taken material direct action in their workplaces to force an end to the ongoing cycle of genocide-profiteering in solidarity with Palestine.”





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August 22, 2025 0 comments
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No Azure for Apartheid protesters holding Join the Worker Intifada - no labor for genocide! sign
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18 protesters arrested: Microsoft claims ‘vandalism and property damage,’ protesters claim ‘genocide powered by Microsoft technology’

by admin August 21, 2025



After police dispersed them on Tuesday, “No Azure for Apartheid” protestors returned to Microsoft’s East Campus Plaza in Redmond, Washington on Wednesday to continue protesting the tech giant’s dealings with Israel, which allegedly include the use of its Azure cloud platform to surveil Palestinians and select Gaza bombing targets.

This time, 18 protesters were arrested for charges including “trespassing, malicious mischief, resisting arrest, and obstruction.”

According to Redmond police, “a few protesters had poured paint over the Microsoft sign and on the ground” (red paint to symbolize blood) and “others had blocked a pedestrian bridge and were using stolen tables and chairs from vendors to form a barrier.”


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In a statement sent to PC Gamer, protest organizers said that “Microsoft chose to militarize its campus to harass, attack and violently arrest 18 people who refused to be cogs in the Israeli genocidal machine.”

A Microsoft spokesperson told PC Gamer that protestors “engaged in vandalism and property damage” and “disrupted, harassed, and took tables and tents from local small businesses at a lunchtime farmer’s market for employees.”

Israel’s attacks on Gaza, allegedly with the help of Microsoft’s services, have killed at least 62,000 people since October 2023, including thousands of children, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health. Over 200 people have now died of malnutrition, the ministry says, and according to the UN, over 1,000 aid seekers in Gaza have been killed since May. Israel has also killed hundreds of aid workers, at one point burying 15 in a mass grave, the UN reports, and recently killed six journalists in Gaza, the latest of many.

“As we have made clear, Microsoft is committed to its human rights standards and contractual terms of service, including in the Middle East,” said Microsoft’s spokesperson. “The company announced last week that it is pursuing a thorough and independent review of new allegations first reported earlier this month about the purported use of its Azure platform in Israel.”

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

Those allegations appeared in an investigation by The Guardian, which claimed that Israel has used Azure to construct “a sweeping and intrusive system that collects and stores recordings of millions of mobile phone calls made each day by Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank” and which “facilitated the preparation of deadly airstrikes and has shaped military operations in Gaza and the West Bank.”

The protestors, composed of “community members and current and former Microsoft workers,” declared Microsoft’s East Campus Plaza a “Liberated Zone,” renaming it the “Martyred Palestinian Children’s Plaza.”

“As we recognize the sacrifice made by those arrested today, we also recognize that the militarism, physical violence and detentions perpetrated by the Redmond Police Department pale in comparison to the experiences Palestinians are forced to endure on a daily basis,” said No Azure for Apartheid in its statement.

Microsoft says it’s doing “the hard work needed to uphold its human rights standards in the Middle East” as well as “supporting and taking clear steps to address unlawful actions that damage property, disrupt business or that threaten and harm others.”

No injuries were reported as a result of the protest or arrests, according to police.

“Our message to [Microsoft CEO] Satya Nadella and other executives who are shamelessly shaking hands with Israeli war criminals to sign deals for genocidal technology is this: our movement will not stop, we will not rest, and we will continue to apply pressure,” say the protesters, who have published their demands at noazureforapartheid.com. “We will show up to confront, disrupt, and take action in every place, at every moment, both announced and unannounced. Escalations will continue as long as Microsoft is invested in the economy of occupation and genocide.”



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August 21, 2025 0 comments
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GameFi Guides

How Immigrants and Protesters Are Being Caught in ICE’s AI Dragnet

by admin June 14, 2025



In brief

  • DHS and ICE are expanding the use of AI to monitor immigrants and U.S. citizens.
  • A drone at a Los Angeles protest highlights growing domestic surveillance.
  • Advocates warn of privacy risks and disproportionate targeting of vulnerable groups.

AI surveillance tools once confined to battlefields are now being used by U.S. immigration authorities to monitor streets, protests, and communities across the country. 

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and other federal agencies are ramping up their use of facial recognition, predictive AI, and military-grade drones. 

That’s sparked alarm among civil liberties advocates over privacy, oversight, and the targeting of undocumented immigrants and U.S. citizens alike.

Last weekend, as protesters marched through downtown Los Angeles, a drone hovered overhead tracking vandals, looters, and those attacking federal agents—an example of how AI-powered surveillance is increasingly entering public spaces. 

Two days later, the Department of Homeland Security posted footage on X, reportedly captured by a Predator drone, showing scenes from the protest. The video highlighted the increasing use of military-grade technology in domestic surveillance.

“There are always concerns around drone use, partly due to perception,” CEO of drone detection company SkySafe, Grant Jordan, told Decrypt. “When an average person sees a drone, they don’t know its purpose or who’s operating it. Unlike helicopters, where the operator is clear, drones are remote and ambiguous.”

Among the most aggressive adopters of surveillance technology are the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which have integrated AI into nearly every phase of immigration enforcement, from identifying individuals to predicting their likelihood of skipping court dates.

WATCH: DHS drone footage of LA rioters.

This is not calm. This is not peaceful.

California politicians must call off their rioting mob. pic.twitter.com/WHNPlzEJG8

— Homeland Security (@DHSgov) June 10, 2025

In addition to drones and AI-enabled cameras, ICE employs a variety of AI-powered systems that operate behind the scenes in enforcement and detention decisions. 

Here are some of the key technologies in use:

Palantir’s Immigration Lifecycle Operating System (ILOS)

  • Also known as the ImmigrationOS, Palantir’s ILOS creates detailed profiles of deportation targets using integrated federal datasets and real-time monitoring.

Mobile Device Analysis

  • Used by investigators and analysts to identify and extract evidence, relationships, and networks from mobile device data, utilizing machine learning capabilities to determine locations of interest.

Voice Analytics and Translation

  • A voice analytics tool that utilizes machine learning to transcribe and translate multilingual audio, enabling agents to more efficiently identify investigative leads and analyze evidence without relying solely on manual review.

Facial Recognition Technology

  • Used by Homeland Security Investigations to identify victims and perpetrators in child exploitation cases. The technology generates leads on potential identities of victims and offenders; however, ICE said no enforcement action is taken based solely on these leads.

Hurricane Score

  • Predicts compliance risk for non-detained immigrants in ICE’s supervision program. Hurricane Score is a quasi-binomial, binary classification machine learning model that is given information about an individual and determines the probability that the individual will fail to appear for a hearing, based on patterns the model has learned from inactive case data.

While federal agencies argue the tools improve efficiency and public safety, civil liberties advocates warn they are often deployed without transparency or oversight, posing a chilling threat to privacy and disproportionately affecting immigrant and marginalized communities.

“We know immigrant communities face disproportionate policing, particularly Black and brown immigrants, and surveillance tech is part of a larger system of control to police their daily lives,” Citlaly Mora with the non-profit organization Just Futures Law, told Decrypt. 

“We know that DHS has an arsenal full of weaponized technology, and its main purpose is to identify and ultimately deport individuals. In the hands of ICE, these technologies present a danger to our communities’ safety,” Mora added.

She continued: “Surveillance of any kind, especially when conducted by government or law enforcement, has the potential to chill speech and people’s First Amendment rights. When it comes to groups who are exercising their right to protest or immigrant communities, we know surveillance is used to target them and cause adverse effects.”

Advocates argue that community engagement is crucial in combating the unchecked spread of surveillance technology at the local level.



“In addition to becoming politically active, it’s important not to simply accept these technologies and how the government uses them,” Jay Stanley, senior policy analyst with the ACLU,  told Decrypt. 

“Local law enforcement and other agencies are supposed to serve the public. That means if communities object and say, ‘We do not want the police using drones over our neighborhoods or tracking and storing our movements,’ that should be respected,” Stanley added.

Stanley also said communities shouldn’t accept the use of surveillance technology as inevitable.

“We can’t stop its development, but we can decide how it’s deployed in our communities and how government agencies are, and are not, allowed to use it,” he said.

ICE and the DHS did not respond to Decrypt’s requests for comment.

Edited by Sebastian Sinclair

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A weekly AI journey narrated by Gen, a generative AI model.





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June 14, 2025 0 comments
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