Microsoft released new details about action it's taken against sexual harassment. 
Microsoft fired roughly 20 employees for sexual harassment complaints filed in the course of a single year, according to a memo from the company’s top human resources executive.
Kathleen Hogan, Microsoft’s chief people officer, told employees on Thursday that the company received 83 sexual harassment claims in the United States from July 2016 through June 2017.
“Nearly 50% were found to be supported in part or in full following the investigation, and more than half of these resulted in termination of an employee who engaged in unacceptable behavior,” Hogan wrote in the memo to all employees.
The new details in the memo are an attempt to push back against the idea that Microsoft doesn’t take harassment and discrimination complaints seriously enough, after unflattering claims were made public in a court document this week.
The documents, from a lawsuit filed by a former employee, alleged that women at Microsoft filed 238 complaints about harassment and discrimination with the company’s HR department between 2010 and 2016.
The lawsuit said that only one of the 118 gender discrimination complaints was considered “founded” by Microsoft’s employment relations investigations team.
In her memo, Hogan said reports suggesting Microsoft doesn’t “take these issues seriously and don’t investigate complaints thoroughly” included “inaccurate and misleading data.”
“We want people to be able to raise their concerns. We take these concerns seriously and we investigate them thoroughly. And where we find issues, we take appropriate action,” she wrote.
In addition to the harassment figures, Hogan also said Microsoft received 84 complaints about gender discrimination during the same time period. About 10% of those complaints “were found to be supported in part or in full,” she said.
In a memo titled "Making sure every voice is heard," Microsoft informed employees about steps it's taken regarding sexual harassment complaints.
The company said it fired about 20 people over the course of one year after receiving 83 sexual harassment claims in the U.S. from July 2016 through June 2017.
The release of the new details comes after court documents from a 2015 lawsuit were unsealed earlier this week. Legal filings claimed out of 118 gender discrimination complaints received between 2010 and 2016, Microsoft deemed one as "founded."
In the wake of the #MeToo movement, some tech giants have responded to growing criticism about gender discrimination. Last year, Microsoft eliminated forced arbitration agreements, allowing employees alleging sexual harassment to take their cases to court.