Washington DC/Culver City California (NPR) – Microsoft, which acquired Skype in 2011 for $8.5 billion, announced in a post on X on Friday that the iconic voice-over-Internet protocol (VoIP) service would soon go dark. It encouraged Skype users to instead migrate to a free version of Microsoft Teams — a communication app that helps users work together in real time.
In the more than two decades since it was founded, Skype has been largely overtaken by a bevy of competitors, such as FaceTime, WhatsApp, Zoom and Slack.
In a separate blog post, Microsoft said the move to shutter Skype was meant “to streamline our free consumer communications offerings so we can more easily adapt to customer needs.”
Microsoft says it will wind down the pioneering and once ubiquitous free video calling service so it can streamline its consumer communications offerings, such as Microsoft Teams.
— NPR (@npr.org) 2025-02-28T22:26:10.084Z




