Microsoft suspends dev accounts for high-profile open source projects

(bleepingcomputer.com)

301 points | by N19PEDL2 2 hours ago

25 comments

  • dontdoxxme 1 hour ago
    Microsoft loves sending emails with "Action required" in the subject, when actually no action is required, or it doesn't apply to you, or whatever. Such corporate speak. It's fun searching your email for "Action required" and finding all the things you were supposed to do and it turns out didn't need to do anything about.
    • golfer 45 minutes ago
      "Crying wolf" constantly like this is so frustrating. It waters down the message until they send something you really need to worry about, which you ignore like the rest of the pointless messages.
      • Hendrikto 15 minutes ago
        What marketing/sales/HR types don’t seem to understand is that when everything is the highest priority, nothing is.
        • dwedge 0 minutes ago
          I saw someone had an idea to have a ticket system where the user chose the priority, and it displaced the current ticket at that priority, with the catch being that this ticket was sent back to the user with "are you sure?"

          CEO can't login during a demo. Sandra from accounting can't print from the closest printer and confirmed this is higher priority

        • xnorswap 2 minutes ago
          This is a bit off topic, but I always say that priority is a ranking of actual demands, it is an ordering, one that needs curating and keeping updated based on context and changes in environment.

          Nothing else works for prioritisation, any other categorising into "High/Medium/Low" just fails.

          By doing so you end up with the nonsense we had at a company I once worked for, where stories were all put in medium.

          This was because stories in low were simply never actioned, they'd never ever get done, everyone came to implicitly understand this. It was still a useful dumping ground for the kinds of stories you know you ought to do, but no-one wanted to do, but it was useful to have noted on record. But for prioritising actual work, it was useless.

          Stories in High had a special process defined in a handbook that no-one wanted the hassle of dealing with.

          So everything was Medium.

          This had obvious problems, and it grew larger than could be managed.

          So "Just Above Medium" was born, for stories that were higher priority than your everyday stories in Medium.

          This in time grew too, so "Just Above Just Above Medium" (aka JAJAM) was born.

          By the time I started, there was even a "JAJAM+" category, for stories that had to be fast-tracked through the process too.

          The whole thing essentially fell back to having the product/development leads come to an understanding of what work needed to be done. Which is the right way to do it, but that should simply be made more explicit and part of the process by simply having all stories ranked.

          Then you don't need the mental overhead of trying to decide in a design meeting if something is "Just above Medium" or just above that...

        • sheiyei 2 minutes ago
          But it is MY highest priority!
    • adabyron 16 minutes ago
      Google famously just did this with their Captcha service. Had lots of people signing up for a more complicated version on Google Cloud that they didn't need to do.
      • giancarlostoro 13 minutes ago
        At that point I would rather sign up for CloudFlare's captcha service. I already use them for some of my websites.
    • bux93 3 minutes ago
      I was told by awareness training that e-mails titled "Action required" are phishing mails.
    • eurekin 23 minutes ago
      That's actually a good case for a LLM going through it and deciding: "nah, overblown" and "Oh, yeah, this one can close the account"
    • Onavo 43 minutes ago
      Because it absolves them of liability of anything goes wrong. They can point to the email say "we warned you". Having to filter and target the specific set of customers that a notice applies to carries risk and costs to them and they wanna pass it to you.
  • xg15 31 minutes ago
    > We're taking this as an opportunity to review how we communicate changes like this and make sure we're doing it better.

    As I'm sure the Vogons did after they blew up Earth for the hyperspace bypass road and realized the planet had inexplicably still been habitated.

  • pino83 12 minutes ago
    Owwwwww...... :D

    I've no idea whether MS either has a veeeeery clever plan about what they are doing, and I just don't get it, or whether that's just completely stupid in the current times when Windows' fanbase is somewhat declining anyways.

    On the other hand, people always have a hard time understanding the trouble they order when they let things centralize too much. When they are too okay with depending on e.g. BigTech companies too much.

    And in that regard, those news are probably actually good news... It helps people learning about how things work... So they can make better decisions in the future. Better for all of us.

    • echelon 6 minutes ago
      Satya Nadella had built up so much Microsoft goodwill from 2014 - 2022. When they first purchased Github, it looked like Microsoft was opening up and was going good things.

      The first sign things were souring was when Microsoft dumped their gaming plans after just buying up all he major studios. First sign they only cared about Azure and AI.

      Now it's blatantly obvious they're giving up everything to chase enterprise AI.

  • ectospheno 7 minutes ago
    https://www.theregister.com/2026/04/09/microsoft_dev_account...

    Microsoft response at the end of that article.

  • mellosouls 1 hour ago
    Discussed here yesterday:

    Microsoft terminates VeraCrypt account, halting Windows updates (575 points, 239 comments)

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47690977

  • zarzavat 10 minutes ago
    I'm amused by this saga. Wireguard is working just fine on my machines (Linux and Mac).

    Apparently nobody at Microsoft considered that blocking critical software hurts Microsoft more than the open source developers being blocked.

  • tacker2000 1 hour ago
    In the tech world, security is mostly just a theater , it is used to push though unwanted and unpopular things, like access control, privacy invasion, etc...

    All this signing business, leads to one party having the final say, and guess what, they are going to abuse that power...

    • mcdeltat 18 minutes ago
      Because some people realised that insurance is the ultimate form of security? Why prevent failure when the consequences of failure can simply be offloaded to others?
    • palata 45 minutes ago
      I think it's just like in software in general: most software is bad, but it doesn't mean that all software is bad and unnecessary.

      Most security is done badly, but it doesn't mean that security is unnecessary.

      But I agree: TooBigTech has TooMuchPower.

    • balamatom 1 hour ago
      Sacrifice principles for pragmatism and you lose both.
  • happymellon 6 minutes ago
    > Wednesday, Microsoft Vice President Scott Hanselman said the developer accounts were automatically suspended because they failed the "mandatory account verification for all partners in the Windows Hardware Program who have not completed account verification since April 2024" that the company had been emailing "everyone" about since October 2025.

    It doesn't sound like suspention, because they would be able to fill out the form and get unsuspended. This is closer to account termination.

  • rob74 1 hour ago
    • ticulatedspline 1 hour ago
      this source is a bit better and answers a couple questions.

      first the verification wasn't just "click this link to prove you own this email"

      >That account verification process meant that developers were required to upload their government-issued ID before they were allowed to publish potentially highly sensitive code to the broader Windows user base.

      Also according to at least one affected user they didn't actually get notified of the process.

      > “Microsoft never sent me any notification at all about this. I’ve looked in every inbox in every spam folder in every mail log, and zero, nothing, zilch,” Donenfeld said.

      • Maxious 1 hour ago
        Some devs did get the email and follow the process and still got kicked out

        > Don’t let anyone tell you it’s because we didn’t read our emails or submit the right verification paperwork. Cuz we did all that back in October. > And this month, we were suddenly and without any warning locked out.

        https://x.com/OSRDrivers/status/2042286973461709183

  • rixthefox 1 hour ago
    lol, Microslop shooting themselves in the foot once again.

    At this point people will move to MacOS or Linux because so much damage to their brand can’t simply be ignored anymore.

    • huijzer 43 minutes ago
      And also consider moving some of your repos to Forgejo. I’m running it for more than a year now and it is by far my favorite service. Way faster and essential features do not require monthly payment (branch protection for example). It can easily run on a Raspberry Pi 4 1 GB RAM.

      Use Docker Compose and put Caddy in front of it for HTTPS. For backups the easy way is to just git pull your repos via cron on some remote systems. Or use syncthing to also move the server configs over. For the runner, 1 GB RPi 4 should be fine for many situations. It can compile and run many Rust/Python tests fine or build static sites. You could also setup an old x86 next to it (this is essentially what GitHub Runners are too: old x86 cpu’s).

    • raincole 1 minute ago
      People: Windows is too centralized. Let's move to MacOS.

      Don't know who those people are or if they exist, but not the brightest ones for sure.

    • ta988 1 hour ago
      Apple has done the exact same with its iphone app store, lots of companies got shut down because of their app not beeing available anymore with no explanation. The problem is with exclusive app stores.
      • freeAgent 7 minutes ago
        Apple requires notorization for applications outside their store too.
    • palata 44 minutes ago
      > At this point people will move to

      I think most people just don't care about their computer. Most people just use whatever they are told to use at work.

      • croes 24 minutes ago
        Most people are just accustomed to pain because they don’t know it could be different
    • pjmlp 15 minutes ago
      No they won't, because Apple is out of reach for their pockets, and most OEMs still don't sell Linux powered devices on the shops people go to.
      • tock 11 minutes ago
        The Neo changes things. Only $600.
        • pjmlp 7 minutes ago
          It is 800 euros for 8 GB device, no thanks, especially in coutries where many dream of getting 1000 euros a month.
    • patates 1 hour ago
      Writing this from a corporate win11 computer, the whole thing is so laggy, it's unbelievable. Last year, I had revived my old desktop from 2007 with an intel Q6600, windows xp and a clicky dying HDD, and that thing flied compared to this. Dear Microsoft and its partners (Especially DELL!), what the hell happened?!
      • user2722 11 minutes ago
        I'd say most big companies are rent-seekers which also happen to do <whatever>.

        So, what happened is Microsoft is first a rent-seeker and afterwards, a service and software company.

        The fix may vary, but I'm guessing the diagnosis is rather less divisive.

      • IcePic 34 minutes ago
        In some sense, "you did".

        Your actions, intentional and direct or not, allowed for one more sale of Win11 and an accompanying sad Dell computer, giving them the signal (however weak from you as one single individual) that whatever crap they have been doing up to now, still is a good choice in order to sell one of those combinations.

    • this_user 54 minutes ago
      I mean, we have been saying that exact thing for close to 30 years at this point.

      Yet, they are still around, they are still deeply embedded in most businesses, and no matter how much they screw up, it just keeps going.

  • mittermayr 1 hour ago
    Just got a Wireguard update on Windows a minute ago, so seems resolved?
    • awestroke 55 minutes ago
      I wouldn't install that update if I were you
      • semiquaver 38 minutes ago
        This is the definition of FUD.
        • awestroke 15 minutes ago
          Or a reasonable security posture. Unless there is a vulnerability in the current version, why scramble to update? And if the author:

          1. claims they do not have access to the signing account

          2. Recently said that they are not planning any important release in the next 60 days

          Then I would claim that rushing to update is plain reckless. But move fast and break things, I guess

  • Talderigi 9 minutes ago
    open source but the off switch is centralized
  • blueTiger33 25 minutes ago
    well, well, well...what do we have here? another big tech trying to undermine competition? :D Never happened before
  • TiredOfLife 58 minutes ago
    Seems that a developer of kernel level anticheat also was suspended. So not all is as bad.
  • sneak 59 minutes ago
    FYI: on macOS you can’t even ship VPN software that uses the modern APIs outside of the app store for self-distribution. An ADP membership is required, full stop.
  • ksk23 51 minutes ago
    Would be nice if any outlet could actually check; did, or did Microsoft not inform these devs beforehand?!
    • threatripper 26 minutes ago
      Even if they did, it didn't work.
      • ZiiS 18 minutes ago
        As the strongest OS advocate who has not ran Windows in a quarter century and is posting this over a Wireguard link; the is some double standards here. A corporate VPN vender who did not ensure they received all notifications from Microsoft regarding a certificate that effectively let's them root millions of computers would be a strong signal of concern.
  • shevy-java 1 hour ago
    Well, Microsoft is evil so no surprise - but this seems like targeted censorship:

    "The list of affected projects includes, but is not limited to, Virtual Private Network (VPN) software WireGuard, on-the-fly encryption (OTFE) utility VeraCrypt, the MemTest86 Random Access Memory (RAM) testing and diagnosis tool, and the Windscribe VPN software."

    It seems to go against VPN right? Is there a connection to other things such as the mem-test tool? This one is the only one that does not fit here. Or perhaps we don't have the full picture.

    • rob74 1 hour ago
      It seems to go against developers of Windows drivers (which includes VPNs) - apparently there was a “mandatory account verification for all partners in the Windows Hardware Program who have not completed account verification since April 2024”, but for some reason it looks like no one notified these guys that they have to verify their accounts.
    • windexh8er 1 hour ago
      This is preemption, I believe, in the US for what's coming. Given the states trying to ram in "age verification" (mass surveillance propaganda, same agenda as CSAM) I no doubt believe that the only VPNs the USG wants people to have access to are corporate (easy entry point) and pwn'd VPNs [0] (in the media lately).

      Fuck Microsoft (aka Microslop).

      [0] https://www.wired.com/story/using-a-vpn-may-subject-you-to-n...

    • HumblyTossed 1 hour ago
      I wonder if they were compelled by someone in the government.
  • andrewstuart 1 hour ago
    I feel like Hanselman is one of the few old generation Microsoft people. When he leaves it’ll be young people who don’t know Microsoft and have no understanding of or connection with Microsoft products.
    • jonstewart 1 hour ago
      Dave Cutler and Raymond Chen might like a word.
    • stavros 36 minutes ago
      I don't know about his career in general, but Hanselman once spoke at a conference I was helping organize here in Thessaloniki, and he was great. Really knowledgeable and very down to earth.
  • cbeach 1 hour ago
    Alongside talk from the UK Labour government about intervening on VPNs, I'm getting uneasy vibes about this move, especially since Microsoft is one of the most government-friendly corporations in the big tech arena.

    The surveillance state is growing more sinister every day (especially in the UK), but the efforts are somewhat thwarted by the existence of VPNs.

    Once they find a way to undermine VPNs, the UK govt will have literal CCP-level control over our access to information and communication.

    • 0x3f 1 hour ago
      CCP-level control over access to information is not actually very tight, technologically nor ideologically, but it does enable a form of rule-by-law which is far more useful.
    • pasc1878 1 hour ago
      The problem is that the social media companies have not been dealing with abusive posts of various sources. Governments can't take action against the bad posters are they are from another Government (and in some cases are employed by that government to cause trouble). Thus Governments have to take actions which they can control, unfortunately these actions will affect more than the bad abusers.
      • 0x3f 1 hour ago
        You assume your premise. No the government actually doesn't 'have to' take action about mean things on the internet. The UK has such an obsession with regulating what is, essentially, politeness.
        • vladvasiliu 52 minutes ago
          While I don't particularly care for the UK's approach to these things, I can't help but be shocked at how many governments seem to all of a sudden have dreamed up the same idea. Independently, I'm sure.
          • 0x3f 37 minutes ago
            I suppose the US is the unique one really, when it comes to a history of protecting certain types of speech. They've never really regulated (what I would call) politeness between people in any form.

            The UK, and I assume much of Europe, criminalizes truly petty levels of speech. For example, it's illegal to insult someone and cause them 'alarm' or 'distress' in the street.

            Thus the non-technical populace see rudeness on the internet as the result of some kind of wild west situation that the government needs to control, to bring it in line with the rest of the public realm.

      • pjc50 38 minutes ago
        This should be made a problem for the social media companies (which it largely has, hence all the age verification fiasco), not absolutely everyone on the internet.
  • myko 1 hour ago
    Modern computing does not make me feel good. Really hate this signing business controlled by the OS vendors. I get the added security benefits, but I'm not sure the tradeoff is worth it.
    • dmantis 1 hour ago
      True, but there is yet a one major OS that allows you to run whatever you see fit on your computer.

      If you are really disgusted by those moves, you have a time to switch. If enough people switch, then we can just forget about that garbage.

      • boudin 1 hour ago
        At this point, windows is already becoming a poor implementation of wine anyway.
      • weberer 1 hour ago
        At this rate, I'd say we have less than a year before world governments simultaneously start rolling out laws making Linux illegal. Of course they won't call it "The Ban Linux Bill" but it will be back-channeled through some bullshit security or user verification requirement.
        • CivBase 22 minutes ago
          It's too late to close that Pandora's box. Linux is far too ubiquitous now. Even if it still lags behind Windows in the desktop computing space, it is already a non-trivial market share and growing quickly. And in many other computing spaces, Linux is king.

          They can't realistically make Linux illegal. But they can put onerous requirements on popular Linux distributions - such as the age "verification" features they're currently trying to require[0]. Hopefully that proves to be ineffective.

          [0] https://agelesslinux.org/distros.html

    • shevy-java 1 hour ago
      > but I'm not sure the tradeoff is worth it.

      Well corporations decide on that. I abandoned rubygems.org when they added the 100.000 download limit; past that point I was no longer able to remove old gem. Then came the new corporate laws for rubygems.org and mass-firing of about 8 open source developers who were involved with the ruby ecosystem.

      We simply need to accept that corporations controlling an ecosystem can lead to HUGE problems. We need an alternative here. I don't have a good alternative either to suggest - money is influential. People adjust their behaviour and how they think with regards to money all the time. We could need some kind of model that also handles the economy. And, again - I have absolutely no clue how that could or should look like.

      • trinsic2 18 minutes ago
        We need to create a special interest org for people that support general computing. I'm open to be part of something like this.[0]. Reach out to me if interested

        [0]: https://scottRlarson.com

  • 0gs 49 minutes ago
    i mean this has to be Mythos related, no? biiiig stretch?
  • jmclnx 1 hour ago
    I read elsewhere (here?) that it was the main developer of WireGuard who had their account suspended. If true, and based on what I read seems it is true, I am surprised this did not reach the "mainstream" press.

    All I can say is this is another proof of M/S abuse of their users:

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47710149

    • kotaKat 21 minutes ago
      Yeah, but you're not allowed to call it "abuse" because that's too "baity" according to the cabal.
  • dfir-lab 20 minutes ago
    [dead]
  • Fokamul 1 hour ago
    [flagged]
  • snarfy 1 hour ago
    It's really just typical corporate bs.

    "I've been using the same account doing the same actions for 10 years what changed"

    "We updated our policy 2 years ago. We have been sending you vaguely worded emails this would happen for 2 years, straight to your junk hotmail account you setup for this, why didn't you read them?"

    Nothing nefarious unless you consider bureaucracy