News

Before the Danish government announced its move, Denmark's largest cities, Copenhagen and Aarhus, had already announced plans ...
Microsoft has signed a carbon removal agreement with Gaia, a joint venture between Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners (CIP) ...
The deal with Gaia, a Denmark-based carbon removal venture, will deliver the tech giant 2.95 million carbon removal credits ...
Denmark is moving one of its government ministries from Microsoft Office and Microsoft 365 to the open-source LibreOffice. It ...
Microsoft said it would provide cash, artificial intelligence tools and computing services to schools, colleges and nonprofit ...
Lyon is ditching Microsoft software for Linux, OnlyOffice, and PostgreSQL, joining Denmark and Germany in a push for open-source tools.
Freddy Kristiansen, a former principal product manager at Microsoft, continues to attend his Denmark office despite being ...
A statement has been issued by Microsoft after millions of users have found themselves unable to use Outlook services today.
Two of Denmark’s biggest municipalities are saying no to US cloud services in the latest move by European governments to reduce their reliance on American Big Tech.
Denmark’s initiative is not without precedent. More than a decade ago, Germany, most notably the city of Munich, attempted to replace Microsoft products with Linux and LibreOffice.