Microsoft Asks Some Employees in China to Move to Countries Like Australia and the US
9News
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Details
- Date Published
- 17 May 2024
- Priority Score
- 2
- Australian
- Yes
- Created
- 8 Mar 2025, 02:41 pm
Description
<p>At least 100 employees have been asked to consider the move amid a tech war between Beijing and the Western world. </p>
Summary
With rising tensions between China and Western nations over technology advancements such as AI, Microsoft is requesting certain employees in China, particularly those involved in cloud computing, to consider relocating to countries like the United States and Australia. This move reflects the broader geopolitical struggle, particularly surrounding tech innovations and AI, where national security concerns are increasingly intersecting with corporate decisions. The situation underscores the challenges multinational companies face in navigating international policies and regulations in the evolving tech landscape. The implications for global AI safety and policy governance may lie in how these geopolitical tensions drive technological bifurcation, potentially influencing collaborative safety standards and practices.
Body
Microsoft has asked at least 100 of its employees in China to consider moving to other countries, according to Chinese state media reports.The reports come as relations between Beijing and Washington deteriorate over technologies like artificial intelligence (AI) and clean energy.Microsoft employees, mostly involved with cloud computing, were recently offered the opportunity to work in the United States, Australia or Ireland, among other countries, state-run outlet The Paper said in a report yesterday, citing an unnamed source.READ MORE: Body of woman who went swimming off tourist hotspot foundMicrosoft has asked at least 100 of its employees in China to consider moving to other countries.(CNN)"Providing internal opportunities is a regular part of managing our global business. As part of this process, we shared an optional internal transfer opportunity with a subset of employees," a Microsoft spokesperson told CNN yesterday.It did not specify the number of workers who had received the offer.The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday that Microsoft asked as many as 800 employees, mostly engineers with Chinese nationality working on cloud computing and AI, to consider relocating.The Journal, which cited unnamed sources, reported last year that the Biden administration was preparing to restrict Chinese firms' access to US cloud services.The company entered China in 1992 and for decades has counted on its well-known Beijing-based research lab, Microsoft Research Lab Asia, to help it build influence."Everyone is confused," an employee told the Paper, as the affected staff has been given less than a month to decide.READ MORE: Netflix quietly hikes prices for Australian subscribersThe best companies to work for in 2024View GalleryYicai, a Chinese state-owned financial media outlet, wrote that more than 100 employees were affected. It added that people had the option not to move.The reports come in the same week President Joe Biden announced tariffs on $18 billion ($AUD27 billion) worth of imports of Chinese electric vehicles and an array of other products.Biden said he was trying to prevent unfair competition from China decimating US industries.The tech war between the two economic superpowers has been intensifying for years.In October, the Biden administration limited the types of semi-conductors that American companies can sell to China.In recent months, the United States has also enlisted its allies in Europe and Asia in restricting sales of advanced chipmaking equipment to China.Beijing has hit back by imposing its own curbs on exports of germanium and gallium, two elements essential for making semi-conductors.