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Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella seems to agree with Apple CEO Tim Cook when it comes to privacy, calling this a “fundamental human right.”
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella seems to agree with Apple CEO Tim Cook when it comes to privacy, calling this a “fundamental human right.”Microsoft CEO: Privacy a 'human right'
Despite the lack of a successful smartphone franchise, Microsoft is still very much part of today’s industry with a range of services across the mobile ecosystem. That’s probably why Nadella is such an active attendee at Mobile World Congress 2019.What’s really interesting about what he said during a speech at the show is the extent to which his thinking aligns with what Apple is doing around privacy. For example:
- Nadella shared a vision of intelligence at the edge, securely and privately accessed through multiple user interfaces, touch, speech, vision and more. Apple’s vision aligns to this.
- The Microsoft CEO also looked at how artificial intelligence (AI) is being woven into multiple services – this goes way beyond Siri, but Apple’s platforms also support emerging business intelligence systems – look at Salesforce. “AI is being infused into every experience,” Nadella said.
- Like Cook, Nadella also warned of the unintended consequences of technological advances.
- Like Apple, Microsoft is working to protect customers against such consequences. We ask “difficult questions like not what computers can do, but what computers should do,” Nadella said.
Towards the end of surveillance capitalism?
“That’s why we believe privacy is a fundamental human right,” the Microsoft boss said. “That’s why we prioritize cybersecurity, not just for the largest of companies, but for small businesses and consumers, who are often the most vulnerable to cyber attacks.”This isn’t the first time Nadella has said something like this. He made similar statements in 2018 when discussing the EU’s GDPR legislation.
Apple’s Cook warned European data regulators of the cost and consequence of the erosion of privacy in 2018. When he did, he noted the evolution of an unregulated surveillance economy, warning “this is surveillance.”
Since that speech, Apple has ramped up its offensive against data surveillance companies by progressively eradicating the tools they use to spy on what people and organizations do online, which is why it is deprecating the Do Not Track tech inside of the Safari browser.

