Under CISPE pressure, Microsoft opens the door to fairer cloud competition in Europe

news
Jul 18, 20257 mins

The move gives CISPE members more control over pricing and the ability to privately host customers. But some say it doesnโ€™t go far enough to address competition issues in the European cloud market.

EU-Flag, Cloud
Credit: gotphotos โ€“ shutterstock.com

Microsoft has made concessions to the organization representing Europeโ€™s leading cloud providers, giving its members the ability to offer pay-as-you-go plans, match Azure pricing, and privately host customer workloads.

Some see this as merely one more development, not the culmination of the years-long battle between the tech giant and Cloud Infrastructure Services Providers in Europe (CISPE), which has long argued that Microsoftโ€™s contracts harm the European cloud computing market.

However, โ€œit seems like CISPEโ€™s persistence has paid off, and Microsoft has taken a meaningful step toward fairer terms,โ€ said Phil Brunkard, executive counselor at Info-Tech Research Group UK. โ€œThe real test will be whether that spirit holds as pricing and licensing evolve in the years ahead.โ€

What CISPE got out of the deal

Under the terms of the new agreement, qualified CISPE members will be able to offer Microsoft software to their customers on a pay-as-you-go basis through the CSP-Hoster (CSP-H) program. CISPE says this will offer stronger privacy for European customers and create pricing conditions that are โ€œmore comparableโ€ to those of Microsoftโ€™s Azure cloud platform.

Members can now access pay-as-you-go licensing models for products including Windows Server and SQL Server, in addition to the Flexible Virtualization Benefit already available to them. They will also have access to a new product, Microsoft 365 Local, what CISPE called another step toward โ€œtrue digital sovereignty for European customers.โ€

On the privacy front, members are permitted to host Microsoft workloads as pay-as-you-go on independent European infrastructure, without having to share customer details with Microsoft as previously required; this was one of CISPEโ€™s core concerns.

The new program is open to current CISPE members and eligible providers who join โ€œin the coming months,โ€ according to CISPE. Microsoft will review the program after the first year and could potentially expand access.

Importantly, CISPE notes, the program will be closed to hyperscale cloud providers designated by Microsoft as โ€œListed Providersโ€ (licensees). This preserves its goal to โ€œsupport competition and innovation in the European digital ecosystem by strengthening European cloud providers.โ€

CISPE does acknowledge that the deal lacks two provisions it has been pushing for: It doesnโ€™t allow for Windows 10/11 VDI multi-session on European-owned multi-tenant infrastructure, as Azure Local would have, and it still enforces Entra ID with Microsoft 365, so customers canโ€™t use alternative identity management.

De-escalating years of tensions

The conflict between CISPE and Microsoft goes back for years. Notably, in 2022, the member group filed a formal complaint with the European Commission alleging that the company was charging customers more to run its software on rival clouds. This happened shortly before the adoption of the European Digital Markets Act (DMA), designed to create fairer and more competitive digital markets.

โ€œEuropean cloud providers have long complained that Microsoftโ€™s bringโ€‘yourโ€‘ownโ€‘license rules pushed customers onto Azure by adding extra fees and paperwork everywhere else,โ€ said Brunkard.

He pointed out that Microsoft ultimately compromised and introduced the Flexible Virtualization Benefit, which allowed customers to use their licensed software on any cloud providerโ€™s infrastructure. However, it still blocked regional clouds from offering Windows Server or Microsoftโ€ฏ365 on โ€œtrue pay-as-you-go terms.โ€

In March 2023, the company agreed to change its cloud licensing practices to avoid an EU antitrust probe, and in July 2024, Microsoft and CISPE reached a settlement that required the company to pay โ‚ฌ20 million ($21.7 million) and develop a new product, Azure Local.

Azure Local would have allowed members to run Microsoft software on their platforms at prices equal to Microsoftโ€™s. It was to include multitenancy support for customer workloads, pay-as-you-go licensing for SQL Server, unlimited virtualization and multi-session virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) for Windows, and free security updates.

But then in May of this year, the European Cloud Collaboration Observatory (ECCO), which is providing independent oversight of the deal, found that โ€œboth Microsoft and CISPE have now agreed that Azure Local will not deliver the full set of features outlined in the agreement.โ€ ECCO also described Microsoftโ€™s offering as โ€œdisappointing,โ€ and gave the company an Amber rating, indicating that concerns exist and corrective actions have been proposed.

Under the new agreement, any CISPE member who signs the new addendum can bill Windows, SQLโ€ฏServer, and Microsoftโ€ฏ365 by the hour through the CSPโ€‘Hoster program, Brunkard pointed out. No volume agreement is required, and workloads can reside on a local provider.

โ€œFor many customers who want to keep their data within a national provider for sovereignty or latency reasons, the change should translate into simpler bills and lower overall costs once providers pass through the metered pricing,โ€ he said.

The deal also helps Microsoft โ€œcool off the threatโ€ of a full antitrust probe under the DMA, Brunkard noted.

He emphasized that enterprises should treat their next renewal as a health check. โ€œWhen hosters move to the new model over the coming quarters, customers should make sure that pay-as-you-go savings flow through to them, and that any true-up risk stays with the provider,โ€ he advised.

What about non-CISPE members?

Some say that, while it may be good for CISPE members, the agreement fails to tackle the core issues undermining competition in the EU cloud market.

Mark Boost, CEO at cloud company Civo, pointed out that the concessions apply only to CISPE members, and that thereโ€™s no clarity as to what benefits, if any, other European cloud providers may see.

โ€œIs this a private deal for a select few? Who decides who gets access, Microsoft or regulators?โ€ he asked. โ€œWithout these answers, it is easy to arrive at the assumption that this is a workaround that protects market power instead of challenging it.โ€

Ryan Triplette, executive director of the Coalition for Fair Software Licensing, called it a stalling tactic that simply gives Microsoft more time to lock in customers with โ€œrestrictive and anticompetitiveโ€ licensing practices.

โ€œThis is more smoke and mirrors from Microsoft: Offer weak concessions in an attempt to avoid regulatory scrutiny and disingenuously pretend these actions promote European competition,โ€ she said. โ€œMeanwhile, Microsoft continues to line its pockets at the expense of customer choice around the world.โ€