Microsoft and Amazon sign patent deal
Amazon.com is to pay Microsoft in a deal which includes the Kindle e-book reader.


Microsoft and Amazon.com have signed a cross-licensing agreement, which will see the two tech giants sharing technology.
The deal will see the companies given access to each other's patents, which includes "coverage" for Amazon's Kindle e-book reader, Microsoft noted. The Kindle uses Amazon's own software as well as open source bits.
Microsoft also highlighted that the deal includes Amazon's use of Linux-based servers, but other deal specifics remain confidential.
Amazon will be paying Microsoft an "undisclosed amount" as part of the deal.
Horacio Gutierrez, corporate vice president and deputy general counsel for Intellectual Property and Licensing at Microsoft, said in a statement: "Microsoft's patent portfolio is the largest and strongest in the software industry, and this agreement demonstrates our mutual respect for intellectual property as well as our ability to reach pragmatic solutions to IP issues regardless of whether proprietary or open source software is involved."
Nothing to see?
Jim Zemlin, executive director of the Linux foundation, said it was odd for Microsoft to issue a press release on the agreement, as companies make such deals all the time.
Sign up today and you will receive a free copy of our Future Focus 2025 report - the leading guidance on AI, cybersecurity and other IT challenges as per 700+ senior executives
"Amazing how despite the 'broad range of products and technology' covered in their cross license, Microsoft chose to focus on Linux and open source - distinctly calling it out from 'proprietary software' and wasn't specific about any patents," he said.
"It is worth noting that most technology companies have invested heavily in patents and that a cross-licensing agreement is a non-news event," he added. "The fact that two entities with expensive stockpiles of outdated weapons felt the need to negotiate dtente is not surprising."
Freelance journalist Nicole Kobie first started writing for ITPro in 2007, with bylines in New Scientist, Wired, PC Pro and many more.
Nicole the author of a book about the history of technology, The Long History of the Future.
-
A threat to Google’s dominance? The AI browser wars have begun – here are the top contenders vying for the crown
News Perplexity has unveiled its Comet browser while OpenAI is reportedly planning to follow suit
-
Google Cloud Summit London 2025: Practical AI deployment
ITPro Podcast As startups take hold of technologies such as AI agents, where is the sector headed?
-
‘Lean into it’: Amazon CEO Andy Jassy thinks enterprises need to embrace AI to avoid being left behind – even if that means fewer jobs in the future
News Amazon CEO Andy Jassy thinks companies need to "lean into" AI and embrace the technology despite concerns over job losses.
-
Microsoft workers face a fresh round of layoffs – here’s who could be impacted
News Microsoft will cut 6% of its workforce, equivalent to around 6,000 workers, as part of its latest cost-cutting drive.
-
‘If you want to look like a flesh-bound chatbot, then by all means use an AI teleprompter’: Amazon banned candidates from using AI tools during interviews – here’s why you should never use them to secure a job
News Amazon has banned the use of AI tools during the interview process – and it’s not the only major firm cracking down on the trend.
-
Amazon's RTO mandate could spark a talent exodus
News A survey of Amazon staff suggests plenty remain unhappy about returning to the office next year
-
Amazon's RTO mandate just hit a major roadblock – it doesn’t have enough office space
News The company has told staff in several locations that it won't have room for them all in time
-
“There are other companies around”: AWS CEO Matt Garman says employees pushing back on RTO mandates should quit
News AWS CEO Matt Garman says employees pushing back on RTO mandates should quit
-
Business execs just said the quiet part out loud on RTO mandates — A quarter admit forcing staff back into the office was meant to make them quit
News Companies know staff don't want to go back to the office, and that may be part of their plan with RTO mandates
-
Microsoft tells staff it won’t follow Amazon or Dell on enforcing a return to the office – but there’s a catch
News While other big tech companies are forcing reluctant workforces back into the office, Microsoft isn’t following suit