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Microsoft explains what its Rust and AI code migration plans really mean

After confusion spread online, Microsoft confirmed that plans to reduce C and C++ usage are focused on long-term research, tooling, and security, not an aggressive 2030 cutoff.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Dec 31, 2025, 12:07 AM EST
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Illustration showing the C++ programming language logo inside a blue hexagon, flanked by angle brackets resembling code symbols, on a blue abstract background representing software development and systems programming.
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Microsoft isn’t about to flip a kill switch on C and C++ by 2030 — but a viral LinkedIn post this week exposed a real tension inside big-tech engineering: an aggressive research push to make it far easier to move memory-unsafe legacy code into safer languages like Rust, and the panicked headline that follows whenever those two ideas collide.

The firestarter was a job post and follow-up by Galen Hunt, a distinguished Microsoft engineer, that framed his team’s “North Star” in stark terms: “eliminate every line of C and C++ from Microsoft by 2030,” backed by a programmatic ambition the post condensed to “1 engineer, 1 month, 1 million lines of code.” On its face, that reads like a mission statement — and in the echo chamber of social media, it became a prophecy that Microsoft would suddenly rewrite its OS and cloud stack in Rust, using AI as a bulldozer.

That’s not what’s actually happening. Hunt quickly amended the thread to say the work is a research effort, not an official, company-wide schedule to rip out and replace Windows with Rust. The clarification matters: it draws a line between an experimental team-building tool and a corporate decree to deprecate two foundational languages. Microsoft spokespeople and multiple reporters reiterated the same point — this is ambitious research and tooling work, not a secret roadmap to drop C/C++ overnight.

So what is the work, exactly? The project Hunt describes is about building infrastructure: scalable code graphs, AI agents that can reason about and annotate sprawling interdependent codebases, and conservative automation that can apply or suggest transformations where it’s safe to do so. The real prize is not ideological — it’s practical: eliminate entire classes of memory safety bugs (buffer overflows, use-after-free, etc.) by moving the riskiest components to languages with stronger safety guarantees, or at least by giving engineers tools to modernize code more quickly and reliably. Microsoft has already been investing in Rust and in the tooling that makes it usable inside massive, legacy ecosystems.

There’s a concrete money trail behind the rhetoric. Microsoft has publicly signaled substantial investment in Rust — a multi-year effort that includes funding and engineering time to make Rust “first-class” within its internal systems and build pipelines. That long game is why the idea of automating migrations is appealing: at scale, incremental conversions and containment of unsafe patterns are more feasible than wholesale rewrites. The company’s public moves toward Rust in Windows (and its funding and tooling work) are part of the context that made Hunt’s post feel plausible — even if the 2030 timeline read as theatrical.

For engineers and engineering managers, the episode underlines three practical truths. First, C and C++ aren’t going away any time soon: kernels, drivers, graphics engines, and a vast web of dependencies make an instant cutover absurdly costly and risky. Second, the center of gravity is shifting for new work: where security and long-term maintenance are the priority, architects increasingly choose memory-safe languages like Rust rather than defaulting to C/C++. Third, AI is now part of the tooling conversation — not as an omnipotent autocoder, but as an assistant that can map, annotate, and perform constrained mechanical work so humans can focus on design decisions and safety validation.

That framing — research infrastructure, not a rewrite mandate — matters for how the story will be remembered. Sweeping slogans like “eliminate every line of C/C++ by 2030” make for great recruiting copy and sharper tweets than careful engineering caveats, and they’re guaranteed to make operations teams anxious. But the safer, likelier path is evolutionary: Microsoft and others will continue to embrace Rust for greenfield systems and security-sensitive modules, invest in better tooling, and use automated assistance where it reduces drudgery without reducing human accountability.

Finally, there’s a communication lesson. Tech companies working at the intersection of legacy systems, security, and AI need to be crystal-clear about scope and intent, because the costs of misreading ambition as policy are real — developer morale, enterprise customers’ upgrade plans, and the ecosystem’s assumptions about language longevity all move on perception. Hunt’s correction served to steady the narrative: this is a research program that could, over time, make it much cheaper and safer to migrate risky code — but it’s not a corporate edict that will switch off C and C++ on a certain date.

In short: read the rallying cry as a window into where Microsoft wants its tools to go — more automation, more safety — and not as a timetable for bulldozing the industry’s two most entrenched systems languages. The debate, which reopened — about memory safety, migration tooling, and the role of AI in engineering — is very much worth having.


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