REDMOND, WASH. — Microsoft has locked the account of the developer behind WireGuard, one of the most widely deployed VPN tools on the planet, and the man who built it says he cannot push a single security update to his users until the giant sees fit to let him back in.
The lockout, first reported Tuesday, makes WireGuard the second high-profile open-source project to get frozen out of Microsoft's software distribution pipeline in recent weeks. No warning. No explanation. Just a locked door and a silence that ought to make every developer shipping through Redmond's storefront sleep a little less soundly tonight.
Here is the arithmetic that matters: WireGuard runs inside corporate firewalls, government networks, and the home routers of privacy-conscious citizens from Austin to Amsterdam. Every day the developer cannot ship a patch is a day those users sit exposed to whatever vulnerability comes knocking. Microsoft, which controls the account, the store, and the update mechanism, has offered no public timeline for resolution.
The pattern is what turns a nuisance into a scandal. When one developer gets locked out, that is a clerical error. When two get locked out in the same stretch of calendar, that is a system — or the absence of one. Microsoft's developer platform has become the tollbooth through which a vast share of the world's software must pass. Tollbooths work fine until the keeper wanders off and leaves the gate down.
Meanwhile, the machine keeps eating its own. Word out of San Francisco says a freshly merged Silicon Valley outfit is cutting up to 2,800 jobs after closing a $35 billion deal — the kind of arithmetic where human headcount is the first variable Wall Street wants reduced.
And down in Austin, the robots are making enemies of a different sort. An Avride autonomous vehicle struck and killed a mother duck in a residential neighborhood near the Mueller development, sparking the kind of community fury that no amount of sensor data can calibrate away. "It didn't slow down or hesitate at all, just steamrolled right through," one witness told reporters. The duck is dead. The neighbors are angry. Avride is explaining.
It is a small thing, a duck. But the complaint is the same complaint the WireGuard developer has, and the same complaint 2,800 newly jobless workers have: the machines that were supposed to serve us do not see us. Not the developer trying to protect his users. Not the duck crossing the road. Not the engineer whose desk gets cleared after the merger math is done.
On the brighter side of the ledger, Canva announced it is acquiring Simtheory and Ortto to bolt agentic AI and marketing automation onto its design empire. And a startup called Poke launched a service that lets ordinary citizens summon AI agents by text message — no app, no technical know-how required.
More tools. More power. More gates with no keeper.
This reporter will be watching the WireGuard situation. When Microsoft speaks, you will read it here first.