NicolasKheirallah And you understand that marketing a feature as 'General Availability' then only offering it to 1-2% or less of your customer groups is misleading marketing? When Office 365 began, Microsoft loved the SMB and mid-size companies because they adopted it early while all the big players sat by distrustful. About 5 years ago, the shift began where now, all features were targeted to the corporate world, and the SMB market was left to 'pound sand'. The extensive security features are fantastic, but far too technical for any SMB or most mid-size company to fully comprehend and implement with a small staff, let alone manage and maintain. Most don't even know where the 'quarantine' they had forced upon them is and they lose mail on a daily basis, meaning the product is failing to deliver a core function. When you have 20-30 people it your IT department, it's no problem to handle. There is no 'easy' button for folks who think they are buying protections that are touted as 'Secure by Default' but have no way to keep up with the constant changes required to keep it functional. That extends now to this, where they are only offering this to 1-2% of their tenants.
This is deceptive marketing, false advertising, and if they aren't capable of delivering something to everyone when it's "General Availability", then don't state that it is. Pretty straightforward.