On August 26, 2025, Microsoft’s usually quiet Redmond headquarters became the scene of one of its most disruptive employee protests. A group calling itself No Azure for Apartheid stormed Building 34 and occupied the office of company president Brad Smith, live-streaming the sit-in on Twitch. Within hours, the building was locked down, seven protesters were arrested, and two employees were later fired.
What Happened at Microsoft
The sit-in was not symbolic, it was direct confrontation. Protesters unfurled banners and presented a “summons” accusing Microsoft of enabling Israeli military operations through its Azure cloud contracts. Microsoft confirmed that seven people were arrested during the incident, including two employees, while others were ex-staff or outside activists.
In the days that followed, the company fired additional employees linked to the movement as part of a broader crackdown. President Brad Smith later reaffirmed Microsoft’s human rights commitments, but he drew a hard line against what he described as unlawful disruption that crossed the boundary between speech and workplace sabotage.
Google’s Nimbus Protest
Microsoft isn’t alone in facing employee unrest. In 2024, Google dealt with one of the largest staff-led actions in recent tech history. Workers staged sit-ins at offices in New York and Sunnyvale to protest Project Nimbus, a $1.2 billion cloud contract with Israel’s government.
The demonstrations, organized under the banner No Tech for Apartheid, accused Google of supplying infrastructure that could be used for surveillance against Palestinians. The company responded swiftly: 28 employees were fired for what executives described as policy violations.
For many, Nimbus marked a turning point. It showed that employee activism in Big Tech was not just about workplace conditions but also about the political and ethical consequences of billion-dollar government deals.
Other Precedents in Tech Activism
Google and Microsoft aren’t isolated cases. Employee activism has surfaced across Silicon Valley in different forms:
- Apple’s #AppleToo (2021–22): Workers organized under the #AppleToo movement, speaking out about harassment and discrimination inside the company. The campaign sparked global media coverage and pressure on Apple’s internal culture.
- Microsoft’s Earlier Pushback (2018): Employees protested a U.S. Army contract to use HoloLens for combat training, and later raised alarms about GitHub’s work with ICE, calling on leaders to drop the deals (summary).
- San Francisco Tech Bus Protests (2013–16): While not employee-led, public demonstrations against corporate shuttle buses symbolized wider backlash to Big Tech’s impact on housing and inequality (overview).
Together, these precedents show that worker activism and public activism around tech has been building for years, often forcing companies to respond to pressures far outside product development.
Why Employee Activism Matters Now
What’s striking about the latest wave of protests is how direct they’ve become. At Microsoft, activists occupied an executive office. At Google, they staged sit-ins that led to dozens of firings. These aren’t just petitions or Slack threads, they’re physical, disruptive actions that force leadership to respond.
Global politics play a role. From Israel–Palestine to U.S. military contracts, the conflicts that shape the news are increasingly shaping tech workplaces too. Workers see the infrastructure they build powering systems with political and ethical stakes, and they are demanding accountability.
The corporate response has hardened. Google terminated 28 staff over Nimbus. Microsoft has now fired multiple employees and even referred the protest group to federal authorities. The message is clear: activism has consequences, and companies are willing to draw sharp boundaries.
The Takeaway – From Code to Conscience
Microsoft’s sit-in shows how activism inside tech companies is evolving, from open letters and petitions to occupying executive offices. The same trend played out at Google with Project Nimbus and at Apple with #AppleToo: workers no longer see themselves as just employees, but as stakeholders with power to challenge leadership.
For Big Tech, the tension is clear. Companies want the growth and prestige of billion-dollar government contracts, but those same deals risk sparking revolts among the very people who build their products.
For Canada’s tech ecosystem, the lesson is equally sharp. As startups scale and enter global markets, leadership will need strategies to navigate ethical concerns and employee activism. Worker voices are louder, more coordinated, and increasingly willing to take risks to shape how technology is used.