FTC Probe Puts Microsoft Back in the Antitrust Hot Seat

Key Takeaways

- The FTC is examining whether Microsoft has used unfair competition methods in cloud services and AI
- The investigation focuses on Azure bundling practices and Microsoft's dominant 72% share of enterprise cloud productivity
- A lawsuit, if filed, would be Microsoft's most serious antitrust threat since the 2001 DOJ case
Microsoft spent years watching Google, Apple, and Amazon absorb the brunt of antitrust enforcement. That streak appears to be ending. The Federal Trade Commission is now investigating whether Microsoft has violated competition law through its cloud computing and AI businesses.
The probe, first reported by Bloomberg and expanded on by The Verge, centers on whether Microsoft has used exclusionary tactics in its Azure cloud platform and its growing AI empire. The FTC has sent civil investigative demands to at least half a dozen Microsoft competitors, asking detailed questions about licensing agreements, bundling practices, and product interoperability.
There's no guarantee this ends in a lawsuit. But if it does, Microsoft would face its most serious regulatory threat since a federal court found the company guilty of maintaining an illegal PC operating system monopoly in 2001.
What the FTC Wants to Know
The civil investigative demands span more than 15 pages each and contain over 15 questions, many with extensive sub-parts. The documents ask about Microsoft's business agreements, licensing arrangements, and how well its products work with competitors' systems.
According to The Verge's source, the stated goal is to determine if Microsoft has "used unfair methods of competition in its cloud, software products, and related services in violation of the FTC Act." The FTC did not respond to requests for comment.
Microsoft spokesperson Alex Haurek said the company is "cooperating fully with the FTC and believe our practices promote competition while delivering the innovative products our customers expect."

The Bundling Problem
The investigation appears focused on two main concerns: Azure's market dominance and Microsoft's role in AI.
Microsoft holds 72% of the enterprise cloud-based office productivity market as of Q1 2026. Critics argue the company uses this position to push customers toward Azure and away from competing cloud providers. The company's 2019 licensing changes have drawn particular scrutiny, with customers complaining, often anonymously for fear of retaliation, about practices that make switching providers difficult or expensive.
The egress fee issue has become a flashpoint. Engineers on Hacker News have argued that cloud migration has become intentionally punitive. When companies want to move data away from Azure to a competitor, they face fees that critics say are designed to prevent customer churn rather than reflect actual costs.
“The bundling strategy is no longer a convenience; it's a barrier to entry that has effectively stifled third-party innovation in the cloud and AI space.”
— Sarah Miller, Executive Director at American Economic Liberties Project
The AI Angle
Microsoft has poured $13.5 billion into OpenAI-related infrastructure through mid-2026. That investment gave Microsoft exclusive cloud hosting rights for OpenAI's models and let the company embed AI capabilities across its product line through Copilot.
The FTC appears interested in whether this relationship creates unfair advantages. When a company controls the leading enterprise software suite, the dominant productivity cloud, and has an exclusive partnership with the most prominent AI lab, regulators start asking questions about ecosystem lock-in.
“We are at an inflection point where the regulator's patience with 'ecosystem lock-in' has clearly run out.”
— Dan Ives, Managing Director at Wedbush Securities
What Happens Next
The investigation began under the Biden administration in 2024 and has continued under President Trump. That bipartisan continuity suggests the probe has substantive momentum rather than being a purely political exercise.
The process from here involves several steps. FTC staff will continue gathering evidence, then decide whether to recommend filing a legal complaint. The agency's two commissioners will vote on whether to proceed. Given the current composition and the political climate around Big Tech, approval is plausible but not certain.
A lawsuit would likely take years to resolve. The original Microsoft antitrust case took three years from complaint to verdict, and appeals stretched on further. Any case today would probably follow a similar timeline.
The 2001 Parallel
Microsoft's last major antitrust battle centered on Windows and Internet Explorer. The government argued Microsoft used its operating system monopoly to crush Netscape Navigator. A federal judge agreed, initially ordering the company split in two. That remedy was overturned on appeal, but Microsoft remained under court supervision for years and faced lasting restrictions on its business practices.
The current investigation covers different products but raises similar questions. Is Microsoft using dominance in one market to extend control into adjacent ones? Are licensing terms and technical choices designed to benefit customers or to trap them?
Microsoft emerged from the 2001 case chastened but intact. The company even developed a reputation for regulatory caution, staying out of controversies that ensnared other tech giants. That reputation is now being tested.
Industry Reaction
Opinion is divided on whether the FTC is overreaching or acting appropriately.
On Reddit's r/technology, debates have turned polarized. Some users argue the FTC is "innovation-killing" with excessive regulation. Others contend Microsoft has reached a level of market control that requires structural intervention.
Enterprise customers face their own dilemma. Many rely heavily on Microsoft's integrated stack. If the FTC forces changes to bundling practices or licensing terms, those customers could see both benefits and disruptions.
Logicity's Take
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the FTC investigating Microsoft for?
The FTC is examining whether Microsoft used unfair competition methods in its Azure cloud services, software products, and AI-related offerings. The probe focuses on bundling practices, licensing arrangements, and product interoperability.
Will the FTC sue Microsoft?
Not necessarily. FTC staff will first decide whether to recommend a lawsuit. The agency's commissioners will then vote. The investigation could end without charges, result in a settlement, or lead to formal litigation.
How does this compare to Microsoft's 2001 antitrust case?
The 2001 case focused on Windows and Internet Explorer. Today's investigation centers on cloud computing and AI. Both cases raise similar questions about whether Microsoft uses dominance in one market to extend control into others.
What could happen to Microsoft if the FTC files a lawsuit?
Potential outcomes range from behavioral remedies like forced licensing changes to structural remedies like business unit separations. Any case would likely take years to resolve through litigation and appeals.
How long has the FTC been investigating Microsoft?
The investigation began in 2024 under the Biden administration and has continued under President Trump, indicating bipartisan interest in the probe's outcome.
For context on Microsoft's recent product announcements and AI strategy
More on the competitive AI hardware landscape Microsoft is navigating
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Manaal Khan
Tech & Innovation Writer
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