MICROSOFT & ISRAEL
Israel is currently home to one of Microsoft's three strategic global research and development centers. The Microsoft Israel center is home to some of the company's most exciting and innovative technologies, and employs over 1,000 Israelis.
The Microsoft-Israel center is comprised of core product efforts and incubations in the areas such as big data and business intelligence, cloud, machine learning and personalization. Microsoft's Israel Research and Development Center was the first Microsoft R&D Center to open outside of the United States.
Relying on its original R&D operation which was founded in 1991 and tapping into Israel's deep technological talent pool and its thriving high-tech community, Microsoft inaugurated in April 2006 the Israel Research & Development Center as a significant expansion of the scope and nature of its technology activities in Israel. The Israel R&D Center is strategically situated in two main locations - in Herzeliya, heartland of Israel's high tech industry and in Haifa, home to many graduates of the Technion, Israel's leading technology university. Both of these locations are now home to many prominent venture capital firms and multinational companies with their own research centers.
Some of the prominent innovations that have come out of Microsoft's Israel R&D center include the disk compression and antivirus components of Microsoft's DOS-6 operating system and a bidirectional Windows operating system and Hebrew Windows developed for Microsoft by Kivun Computers.
Marking Microsoft's fifth Israeli acquisition of 2015, including startups Adallom and Aorato, in November 2015 Microsoft announced the purchase of Israeli cyber-security startup Secure Island for an undisclosed sum. Secure Islands is in the business of data protection, and will continue to provide their services to their existing clients such as Vodafone, Credit Suisse, and UBS.
Speaking via video conference at Microsoft Israel R&D Center’s 2016 Think Next event in Tel Aviv, Microsoft founder Bill Gates stated that Israeli developments in areas like analytics and security were “improving the world.”
General manager of Microsoft Global Accelerators Zack Weisfeld praised Israeli start-ups in October 2016, saying that “at the end of the day, and if you get them to the right place, they're unstoppable.”
Microsoft aqcuired Israeli cyber-security firm Hexadite for for $100 million in May 2017. One month later, in June 2017, Microsoft purchased Israeli cloud analytics & optimization service Cloudyn for between $50 and 70 million.
Harry Davies interview
On this Beyond the Walls edition of Understanding Israel Palestine, Jeremy Rothe-Kushel proposes an evolving Beyond the Walls edition mission statement, covers the news & speaks with Harry Davies — Guardian investigations correspondent — about his investigations along with colleagues like Yuval Abraham — at +972 & Local Call — into the major project & contract by Israeli Military Intelligence Unit 8200 with Microsoft’s Azure Cloud Servers in Europe to bulk collect Palestinians’ communications of all sorts in order to mass surveil & target.

ASSAF RAPPAPORT
Former head of Microsoft Israel R&D
Rappaport left his role at Microsoft in 2025 and as of 2026 he is a billionaire with a net worth of over US$2.5 billion according to Forbes
Rappaport is a graduate of Israel's Talpiot program studying Computer Science at the Technion. He is also a fellow of Unit 8200.
He was awarded the 'Intel Award for Excelling Science and Engineering MSc & PhD students' as well as 'Best research in the fields of communication, networks and Internet' from Cisco Systems.
Co-Founder & CEO of Adallom which was created in 2012 by Unit 8200 cyber defense veterans, Adallom is a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) security pioneer. Adallom evolves the way enterprises secure information in SaaS by monitoring all activity, detecting unauthorized access and protecting users in real time.
Rappaport joined Microsoft after it purchased Adallom. He now oversees 1,000 employees at one of the leading R&D centers in the world for one of the world's biggest corporations.
Rappaport made $25 million from the sale of his 7.9% stake in Adallom to Microsoft.
Assaf Rappaport cofounded Israeli cloud security business Wiz and owned a 10% stake in the company.
Google's parent company Alphabet acquired Wiz for $32 billion in cash in March 2026.
Wiz software scans storage providers such as Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure to flag and prioritize security risks.
The company's revenue surpassed $100 million in 2023, when the founders began their "suicide plan" of hiring fast, raising funds and targeting top-of-market corporations.
Wiz customers include Fox, Morgan Stanley and LVMH, whose billionaire CEO wrote the unicorn a personal check.
