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The Nissan logo as seen through a car window at the 2013 Tokyo Motor Show

Microsoft to Plug Renault-Nissan Cars Into Cloud

Sept. 26, 2016
Microsoft will also help Renault and Nissan develop user interfaces for their brands, with the new features reaching the market as early as 2018.

Microsoft Corp. agreed to provide cloud-computing services for cars made by Nissan Motor Co. and Renault SA as the manufacturers push ahead with developing connected vehicles.

Microsoft will build cloud infrastructure for the two carmakers that can host navigation data and allows drivers to predict gas usage and check on their cars remotely, the Redmond, Washington-based software producer said in a statement on Monday. The U.S. company will also help Renault and Nissan, which are both run by CEO Carlos Ghosn, develop user interfaces for their brands. Vehicles with the new features could reach the market as early as 2018, with more than 10 models with autonomous driving technology to be available two years later.

The tie-up will be “a long-term commitment,” Jean-Philippe Courtois, head of Microsoft’s global sales, marketing and operations, said by phone.

Partnerships with technology companies are flourishing as carmakers shift their focus to self-driving technologies and digitization. Last week, the Renault-Nissan alliance said it’s acquiring French software developer Sylpheo.  In March, General Motors Co. agreed to buy self-driving software maker Cruise Automation. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV has teamed up with Google Inc. to develop self-driving minivans, while BMW AG, Audi AG and Daimler AG bought Nokia’s maps business to improve their location services, a key feature of automated-driving technology.

“In order to be leading in the space, we need to partner with the best tech companies,” Ogi Redzic, Renault-Nissan’s head of connectivity services, said by phone.

Connected vehicles have raised concerns that data gathered by the car could be used to track passengers’ whereabouts and get information about whom they call and what they search for on Google on the way — bits of information that are valuable for carmakers including French producer Renault and Japanese partner Nissan, which can then offer tailored services to passengers. 

The arrival of technology companies in the auto industry should be considered a threat, as new entrants may glean data from carmakers that will help them produce their own vehicles in the future, Adam Jonas, an analyst at Morgan Stanley, said in January.

Since “Microsoft is a platform provider, we are not competing with the brands,” and the software maker isn’t seeking to retain car manufacturers’ data, Courtois said. 

While Microsoft is already working with car manufacturers — including a deal to bring augmented-reality goggles to Volvo Car Group showrooms — this is the first long-term partnership of its kind, according to Courtois.

By Ania Nussbaum and Alexandre Boksenbaum-Granier

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Licensed content from Bloomberg, copyright 2016.

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