Microsoft blocked the email account of Chief Prosecutor of the ICC

63 maratumba 26 5/20/2025, 9:55:01 AM heise.de ↗

Comments (26)

saubeidl · 13h ago
This is classic American arrogance, trying to undermine international law for its own selfish agenda.

It reinforces the need for the EU to break free from US tech.

noobermin · 12h ago
America? How is what Israel wants American arrogance?
tartuffe78 · 11h ago
Are you not familiar with the relationship between America and Israel?

No comments yet

trod1234 · 10h ago
You are wrong. It is not 'American' anything.

This is plain corporate malfeasance and corruption.

If anything its highly anti-American, borderline communist/state regime.

American values include many things, one of the more important being free speech.

Such a violation deserves reciprocity, stop blaming issues on the wrong things.

saubeidl · 7h ago
Sure, that is the de-jure definition of 'American' that a lot of good folks in the US also adhere to - I know many of them personally :).

However, that's not the de-facto definition of the US as a geopolitical player right now and Europe can't afford to pretend those two are the same.

exceptione · 9h ago
myth <-> reality

  (50) In the same vein, study the right wing concept of
       "free market" as an exercise.
Aerbil313 · 4h ago
I clicked on this expecting it to be caused by some sort of bug. Lo and behold, to nobody's surprise, oppressors have no shame.
ChrisArchitect · 13h ago
mathgradthrow · 13h ago
The US position on the ICC is very reasonable. Absolutely no one should agree to be under the jurisdiction of an independent international court, but at least many of its members signed on to it.

The court believes that it has jurisdiction over anyone involved in a conflict with a signatory. This is why the president is preauthorized by congress to use military force against the Netherlands, in the event that an american or allied service member is held there.

fwn · 13h ago
This seems like a tangent. The article isn’t about whether the ICC’s jurisdiction is valid—it's about how dependent international institutions (or anyone, really) are on US-based tech providers, and how that exposes them to US executive power, like sanctions or account blocks.

I’m not convinced that “digital sovereignty” is the right framing for this problem. What I think is more important here - and probably more interesting to HN - is the fragility introduced by technological monocultures and lack of service portability. Open protocols, interoperability, and reducing concentration risk matter more than trying to build a digitally fenced-off Europe.

mathgradthrow · 11h ago
Of course its a tangent. The article is trying to talk around the fact the the ICC is a unique diplomatic object wrt the US. Bringing this fact into focus in the conversation is tangential to the article because the article fails to incorporate it.
saubeidl · 13h ago
I think either approach works.

China is definitely digitally fenced-off and you don't see it having these issues.

fwn · 13h ago
> China is definitely digitally fenced-off and you don't see it having these issues.

China is the textbook example of this problem. Political power in China routinely uses infrastructure to suppress or punish those who deviate from approved positions. This is precisely the risk that the article raises.

And obviously, if the ICC were to switch to Chinese infrastructure, it would just be trading one leverage for a more active one.

saubeidl · 12h ago
That's a separate issue. Infrastructure is never suppressed in China because somebody outside of China disapproves of a position. The sovereignty of the Chinese state is maintained.
pk-protect-ai · 13h ago
Now this happens in US too... ICC must use its own mail servers. Actually any government or international organization must use its own infrastructure. Dependency on any 3rd party is an attack vector.
trod1234 · 10h ago
> who deviate from approved positions.

That's making it sound like those approved positions are unchanging. They constantly change, and punish those that didn't change quick enough.

The anaconda in the chandelier in a locked room of blind people.

trod1234 · 10h ago
> Open protocols ... concentration risk matter more...

Well it all comes down to the incentives and money. Money printing sieves money into such titans, concentrating business. You gotta look at the banking cartel before anything else.

saubeidl · 13h ago
That position is pure hubris.
mathgradthrow · 10h ago
Can you use hubris is a different sentence, so that I can make sure I inderstand what you think it means?
saubeidl · 7h ago
It was imperialist hubris for Russia to attack Ukraine.
aegypti · 11h ago
ICC signatories:

- Europe

- LATAM

- subsaharan Africa

ICC nonsignatories:

- US

- China

- India

- Russia

- Turkey

- Israel

- Pakistan

- Egypt

- Saudi Arabia

Hubris is imagining a situation in which The Hague Act is ever tested in the first place!

polski-g · 4h ago
Israel never agreed to abide by the ICC and they're still trying to claim authority over Israeli actions? That's crazy.
dlubarov · 3h ago
Yeah, the ICC considers itself to have jurisdiction over crimes committed by non-parties if they're within the territory of a party to the Rome Statute.

Here the argument goes that the State of Palestine is a party, and Gaza is somehow its territory, even though it has never controlled or governed Gaza.

runarberg · 3h ago
The State of Palestine has two government at the moment which govern separate territories, just like Libya, Yemen, or China. Neither government of Palestine disputes the ICCs jurisdiction over Gaza. And unlike China there have been numerous attempts to unify the two governments, most of them were stopped by Israel.

I think the ICCs argument of jurisdiction is entirely reasonable, and consistent with how the court has ruled previously.

EDIT: Since this is Hacker News and we like nerdy details, I’ve linked below the 2021 ruling that established it’s jurisdiction of Palestine. The ruling was 3-1 and explicitly included the West Bank including East Jerusalem, and Gaza.

https://www.icc-cpi.int/news/icc-pre-trial-chamber-i-issues-...

No comments yet

frankharv · 7h ago
Meanwhile Ursula "lost" her phones text messages and is laughing at oversight.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2x7gzdr01o

mystified5016 · 13h ago
No, the president of the US should just be considered by all to be the god-emperor of the planet.