1. Tor has nothing to do with Microsoft. Microsoft disallowing Tor exit nodes on Azure will just mean exit nodes will move to a new host that does allow them. There are plenty of options. If Microsoft deletes the Tor GitHub repo, the Tor project will just move it to a new service (e.g. GitLab, BitBucket).
2. Yes, obfuscation layers such as meek and obfs4 make it impossible, or at the very least highly unlikely for an ISP to know you are using TOR. They achieve this by accepting TOR packets that are disguised as other service protocols. Theoretically even an ISP doing deep packet analysis wouldn’t be able to tell what the traffic was.
2. Yes, obfuscation layers such as meek and obfs4 make it impossible, or at the very least highly unlikely for an ISP to know you are using TOR. They achieve this by accepting TOR packets that are disguised as other service protocols. Theoretically even an ISP doing deep packet analysis wouldn’t be able to tell what the traffic was.