Microsoft has told its engineers to stop using Anthropic’s Claude Fable 5 and is canceling Claude Code licenses across the company. The move comes after internal reviews flagged concerns about how Anthropic handles data retention for enterprise customers, specifically around sensitive source code and proprietary algorithms.
Multiple outlets, including Forbes, Windows Central, and the Times of India, confirmed the decision. Microsoft employees were reportedly notified through internal channels that Claude Code access would be revoked and replaced with Microsoft’s own Copilot tools.

What Triggered the Ban
The core issue is Anthropic’s data retention policy. According to reports from Windows Central, Microsoft’s security team found that Claude Fable 5 retains conversation data, including code snippets and technical discussions, for longer than Microsoft’s internal data governance policies allow. When engineers paste proprietary code into Claude for debugging or code review, that code potentially sits on Anthropic’s servers.
Microsoft’s concern is not unique. Several Fortune 500 companies have evaluated or restricted AI coding tools based on similar data retention worries. But Microsoft’s position is notable: it owns GitHub Copilot, which directly competes with Claude Code, so the ban also serves a competitive purpose.
The Scale of Claude Adoption at Microsoft
The ban reportedly came after Claude Code became unexpectedly popular among Microsoft engineers. According to a People Matters report, engineers were using Claude Code “too much,” which raised both security flags and internal political tensions. Some teams had integrated Claude into their daily workflows for code review, documentation, and debugging.
This widespread adoption made the transition painful. Teams that had built processes around Claude Code now need to retool for Copilot or other approved alternatives.
Claude Fable 5 and the Broader Access Problem
The Microsoft ban comes at a difficult time for Anthropic. The company is simultaneously dealing with US government restrictions on who can access Claude Fable 5. President Trump signed an executive order limiting distribution of powerful AI models, and Anthropic has been working with government agencies to define acceptable use cases.
India is separately negotiating long-term access to Fable 5 for its government agencies, according to Analytics Insight and Inc42. The dual pressure from US government restrictions and enterprise customer defections puts Anthropic in a difficult position.
What Microsoft Recommends Instead
Microsoft is pushing its own GitHub Copilot, which recently received a major update with Copilot Workspace. The tool offers similar code completion, review, and debugging features to Claude Code, with the added benefit of tighter integration with Azure DevOps and Microsoft’s internal toolchain.
For teams that need capabilities beyond Copilot, Microsoft has approved a shortlist of alternatives including Cursor and internal tools built on Azure OpenAI Service.
FAQ
Can I still use Claude Code at my company?
Microsoft’s ban only applies to its own employees. If you work at a different company, Claude Code remains available as a subscription service. However, you should check your organization’s AI usage policies before pasting proprietary code into any external AI tool.
Is GitHub Copilot as good as Claude Code?
For pure code completion, Copilot is competitive. For complex reasoning about large codebases, many developers still prefer Claude. Copilot’s advantage is tighter IDE integration and enterprise security features that IT departments prefer.
Will other companies ban Claude too?
Some already have. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, and Samsung have all restricted or banned various AI coding tools at different points. The trend toward restricting AI tools that retain data is growing across regulated industries like finance and healthcare.
What happens to existing Claude Code subscriptions at Microsoft?
According to reports, Microsoft is terminating all Claude Code enterprise licenses. Teams that relied on Claude Code are being given a transition period to migrate their workflows to approved alternatives.
