Microsoft coughs up some change after allegedly selling software to no-no companies
Microsoft will pay more than $3.3 million to settle allegations it busted US sanctions by selling software and services to blacklisted companies and individuals in Russia, Iran, and other countries.
The bulk of the 1,252 claimed sanction-busting sales involved deals with Russians and Russian companies in Crimea, a portion of Ukraine that Russia illegally annexed in 2014. With war in Ukraine continuing to rage almost 14 months after Russia's full-on invasion, Ukrainian officials areThere were 54 instances cited of sales to Cuba, followed by 30 attributed to Iran and three to the Syrian government.
Österreich Neuesten Nachrichten, Österreich Schlagzeilen
Similar News:Sie können auch ähnliche Nachrichten wie diese lesen, die wir aus anderen Nachrichtenquellen gesammelt haben.
Russians have helped make Dubai’s property market red hot—againOn Palm Jumeirah, an artificial island in the Gulf, a two-bedroom flat that rented for 100,000 dirhams two years ago can now fetch 215,000 dirhams
Weiterlesen »
Cloud PCs benchmarks aren't meaningful, says MicrosoftBenchmark a cloud PC? No way. Just trust us, they work, says Microsoft
Weiterlesen »
Sony calls UK regulator’s reversed stance on the Microsoft Activision deal ‘surprising and irrational’ | VGCSony has called the UK Competition and Markets Authority's reversed stance on the Microsoft Activision deal 'surprising and irrational'.
Weiterlesen »
Sony pounces on Redfall exclusivity drama in latest response to Microsoft's Activision acquisitionSony has issued a fresh response to the ongoing drama surrounding Microsoft's $68.7bn Activision Blizzard acquisition, …
Weiterlesen »
Microsoft just made your ChatGPT-powered Bing experience less frustratingMicrosoft gives Bing Chat a much needed personality adjustment
Weiterlesen »
Google's looming AI integration into Search should scare the hell out of MicrosoftOpinion: Bing, brace yourself
Weiterlesen »