Wed 30-April-2025

Microsoft should not fund Israeli spying on Palestinians

Tuesday 5-November-2019

The act of Palestinian activists covering their faces during anti-Israeli occupation rallies is an old practice that spans decades. The masking of the face often by Kufyias – traditional Palestinian scarves that grew to symbolize Palestinian resistance – is far from being a fashion statement. Instead it is a survival technique without it activists are likely to be arrested in subsequent nightly raids; at times even assassinated.

In the past Israel used basic technologies to identify Palestinians who take part in protests and mobilize the people in various popular activities. TV news footage or newspaper photos were thoroughly deciphered often with the help of Israel’s collaborators in the Occupied Territories and the ‘culprits’ would be identified summoned to meet Shin Bet intelligence officers or arrested from their homes.

That old technique was eventually replaced by more advanced technology countless images transmitted directly through Israeli drones – the flagship of Israel’s “security industry”. Thousands of Palestinians were detained and hundreds were assassinated in recent years as a result of drones data analyzed through Israel’s burgeoning facial recognition software.

If in the past Palestinian activists were keen on keeping their identity hidden now they have much more compelling reasons to ensure the complete secrecy of their work. Considering the information sharing between the Israeli army and illegal Jewish settlers and their armed militias in the occupied West Bank Palestinians face the double threat of being targeted by armed settlers as well as by Israeli soldiers.

True when it comes to Israel such a grim reality is hardly surprising. But what is truly disturbing is the direct involvement of international corporate giants the likes of Microsoft in facilitating the work of the Israeli military whose sole aim is to crush any form of dissent among Palestinians.

Microsoft prides itself on being a leader in corporate social responsibility (CSR) emphasizing that “privacy (is) a fundamental human right.”

The Washington-State based software giant dedicates much attention at least on paper to the subject of human rights. “Microsoft is committed to respecting human rights” Microsoft Global Human Rights Statement asserts. “We do this by harnessing the beneficial power of technology to help realize and sustain human rights everywhere.”

In practice however Microsoft’s words are hardly in line with its action at least not when its human rights maxims are applied to occupied and besieged Palestinians.

Writing in the American news network NBC News on October 27 Olivia Solon reported on Microsoft funding of the Israeli firm AnyVision which uses facial recognition “to secretly watch West Bank Palestinians”.

Through its venture capital arm M12 Microsoft has reportedly invested $78 million in the Israeli startup company that “uses facial recognition to surveil Palestinians throughout the West Bank in spite of the tech giant’s public pledge to avoid using the technology if it encroaches on democratic freedoms”.

AnyVision had developed an “advanced tactical surveillance” software system dubbed “Better Tomorrow” that according to a joint NBC News-Haaretz investigation “lets customers identify individuals and objects in any live camera feed such as a security camera or smartphone and then track targets as they move between different feeds.”

As disquieting as “Better Tomorrow’s” mission sounds it takes on a truly sinister objective in Palestine. “According to five sources familiar with the matter” wrote Solon “AnyVision’s technology powers a secret military surveillance project throughout the West Bank.”

“One source said the project is nicknamed ‘Google Ayosh’ where ‘Ayosh’ means occupied Palestinian territories and ‘Google’ denotes the technology’s ability to search for people.”

Headquartered in Israel AnyVision has several offices around the world including the US the UK and Singapore. Considering the nature of AnyVision’s work and the intrinsic link between Israel’s technology sector and the country’s military it should have been assumed that the company’s software is likely used to track down Palestinian dissidents.

In July the Israeli newspaper Haaretz pointed out that “AnyVision is taking part in two special projects in assisting the Israeli army in the West Bank. One involves a system that it has installed at army checkpoints that thousands of Palestinians pass through each day on their way to work from the West Bank.”

Former AnyVision employees spoke to NBC News about their experiences with the company one even asserting that he/she “saw no evidence that ethical considerations drove any business decisions” at the firm.

The alarming reports invited strong protests by human rights organizations including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

Alas Microsoft carried on with supporting AnyVision’s work unhindered.

This is not the first time that Microsoft is caught red-handed in its support of the Israeli military or criticized for other unethical practices.

Unlike Facebook Google and others who are constantly albeit deservingly being chastised for violating privacy rules or allowing politics to influence their editorial agenda Microsoft has been left largely outside the brewing controversies. But like the rest Microsoft should be held to account.

In its ‘Human Rights Statement’ Microsoft declared its respect for human rights based on international conventions starting with the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

In occupying and oppressing Palestinians Israel violates every article of that declaration starting with Article 1 which states that “All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights” and including Article 3: “Everyone has the right to life liberty and security of person.”

It will take Microsoft more than hyperlinking to a UN document to show true and sincere respect for human rights.

Indeed for a company that enjoys great popularity throughout the Middle East and in Palestine itself an inevitable first step towards respecting human rights is to immediately divest from AnyVision coupled with an apology for all of those who have already paid the price for that ominous Israeli technology.

– Ramzy Baroud is a journalist author and editor of Palestine Chronicle. He has authored a number of books on the Palestinian struggle including ‘The Last Earth: A Palestinian Story’. Baroud has a Ph.D. in Palestine Studies from the University of Exeter and is a Non-Resident Scholar at Orfalea Center for Global and International Studies University of California Santa Barbara.

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