The International Criminal Court is ditching Microsoft software for an open source alternative

  • The ICC is replacing Microsoft Office software with German firm openDesk
  • This comes amid fears of US retaliation from the Trump administration
  • EU and ICC fear US tech may be hit with ‘kill switch’ via US foreign policy

The International Criminal Court (ICC) is looking to replace its internal work environments to move away from US-made software in fear of retaliation from the US administration.

The Microsoft software currently used in the Hague-based ICC is likely to be replaced with Open Desk, a German collaboration software alternative which is open source, meaning developers have chosen to release the source code – opening it up to scrutiny and often meaning that bugs and vulnerabilities are picked up quickly by the community.

The move protects the ICC from further targeted sanctions by the US government for ‘transgressions against the United States and Israel’ – in which judges and prosecutors for the court have been threatened with travel bans and asset freezes.

Kill switch

Early in 2025, Chief Prosecutor for the ICC Kamrin Khan, after being hit with sanctions from the Trump administration, was disconnected from his email service.

This action was thought to be from Microsoft supporting US sanctions – although the firm denied this, with a spokesperson stating; “at no point did Microsoft cease or suspend its services to the ICC.”

This sparked fears that US tech firms could flip a ‘kill switch’ and cut digital services on orders of Trump – outlining the need to become less dependent on US technology, with firms like Google, Microsoft, and Amazon dominating Europe’s digital services and cloud markets.

A Microsoft spokesperson told TechRadar Pro: “We value our relationship with the ICC as a customer and are convinced that nothing impedes our ability to continue providing services to the ICC in the future.” 

Open Desk is created for public administrations by the German Centre for Digital Sovereignty of the Public Administration (Zendis) – a publicly owned company created with the aim of building sovereign digital infrastructure for EU states.

Efforts have been made to reduce EU reliance on the US not just for digital services, but for hyperscalers too – as Trump’s increasingly hostile and unpredictable foreign policy leaves allies exposed and looking to develop their own infrastructure.

Via Handelsblatt (translated online)

Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!

And of course you can also follow TechRadar on TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.

Read more @ TechRadar

Latest posts

How the creator economy destroyed the internet

Jimmy Donaldson, better known as MrBeast, has the most popular YouTube account with over 450 million subscribers, or a little over 1 in 16...

Segway’s new Myon e-bike will straddle past and future

Segway's modest e-bike lineup is about to gain a new entrant. The Ninebot-owned brand, once known for its pioneering self-balancing scooters, currently only sells...

Paramount launches a hostile $108 billion bid to snatch Warner from Netflix

Paramount has launched a $108.4 billion hostile takeover bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, calling Netflix's $83 billion arrangement to purchase the entertainment giant's studios...

Square’s product chief on the death of the penny and the future of money

Today, I’m talking with Willem Avé, who’s head of product at Square. You know Square — it was started by billionaire Jack Dorsey, of...

The Boys is returning for its final season in April

The Boys' fifth and final season is headed to Amazon Prime Video on April 8th, 2026. In addition to a release date, Prime Video...

OpenAI says it’s disabled ad-like app promotions in ChatGPT

OpenAI has turned off some promotional app messages in ChatGPT after users complained that the chatbot was showing them ads. In a post on...

Genki’s colorful, powerful power strip is 25 percent off

Power strips are generally pretty boring. You plug stuff into them, then you try your best to hide the strip along with all of...

The Verge subscription turns one

We're one year into the experiment of running The Verge with subscriptions, and so far things are going quite well - but we've heard...

Facebook and Instagram will let European users see fewer personal ads

Meta will soon give Instagram and Facebook users in the European Union the option to limit personalised ads, in an effort to comply with...

Apple Watch Series 11 drops $100 to an all-time low price

Sure, Black Friday and Cyber Monday have come and gone, but you can still find a last-minute deal on the best tech gifts. Take...