On August 29, Microsoft went public with promised cloud outsourcing and hosting changes which officials first outlined earlier this year. These changes, which will take effect on October 1, 2022, still don’t address some of the core customer and partner complaints which led to Microsoft revising its policies in these areas.
Microsoft introduced outsourcing restrictions in 2019, resulting in customers paying more to run Microsoft software in non-Microsoft cloud environments. Customers who had been using AWS and Google Cloud as dedicated hosts for running Windows Server and clients were affected directly, but some of them didn’t realize the extent of the impact until their contracts with Microsoft were up for renewal this year. Microsoft’s changes around its bring-your-own-license terms made their contracts more expensive if they wanted to run Microsoft software on anything but Azure.
Some European partners and customers took their complaints to European antitrust authorities. Microsoft responded with a set of “European Cloud Principles”, which officials said would level the playing field — to some extent — for partners and customers who wanted to run Microsoft software on certain non-Microsoft cloud infrastructures.
Source: ZD Net