New Products
Intel gets record fine in antitrust case
The European Commission found that Intel had abused its dominant market position by engaging illegal anticompetitive practices in the time between October 2002 and December 2008 actually the practices in part seem to be ongoing, and the EC ordered Intel to immediately cease them. "Such a serious and sustained violation of the EU's antitrust rules cannot be tolerated", explained EU competition Commissioner Neelie Kroess.
According to the findings, Intel used two ways of illegal practices: The company gave hidden rebates to computer manufacturers on the condition to keep production of computers equipped with microprocessors from competitors at a very low level or even at zero. In addition, Intel had paid those manufacturers for halting or delaying product launches for computers based on non-Intel CPUs. The commission lists computer manufacturers Acer, Dell, HP, Lenovo and NEC as receivers of such payments.
In addition, Intel paid retailers on condition to stock only computers with Intel CPUs. By doing so, the chip vendor has choked competition and thus harmed consumers, the commission says. In this case, the company concerned is Media Saturn Holding which runs the MediaMarkt and Saturn chains.
While it was widely expected that the commission will find Intel guilty, the amount of the fine was unclear. Some observers had expected even more in theory, it could have been up to one tenth of the company's annual sales. At sales of 27.2 billion in 2007, this could have translated into a fine of up to 2.7 billion. In a press release, the EC antitrust commission said that the fine takes in account the duration and gravity of the infringement, and has been calculated based on the value of Intel's x86 CPU sales in the European Economic Area (EEA). The fine is the highest the EC antitrust authorities ever imposed.
The proceedings have been triggered by a complaint of Intel competitor AMD. The reaction at AMD however was rather guarded. "Now the market power can go where it belongs to the computer manufacturers, the dealers and, in the first place, to the PC buyers", explained Guilano Meroni, President of AMD Europe. "We expect that in a functioning market we can keep up with the monopolist. A test case will be how fast AMD-equipped PCs will be obtainable at the computer outlets mentioned in the case," added Jens Drews, Director Government Relations for AMD.
Intel said it won't accept the ruling. "This is the wrong decision", said Intel president Paul Otellini in a press release. "No end user had any damage, and we are going to appeal."
Related articles
Intel loses another round against EU regulators
Intel accuses Europe of discrimination, seeks antitrust reversal
EU antitrust officials raid Intel offices
- Free DSP graphical software development tool automatically generates prototyping code
- ASMI buys Siemens' SMT business
- Group to define benchmark for deep packet inspection
- EU embedded project SPEEDS to conclusion
- IBM crafts silicon optical amplifier
- ST offers dual-core Cortex-A9 processor for embedded apps
- Low power audio hub solution targets portable digital audio applications
- Freescale and Indesit collaborate on smart appliance solutions for ZigBee connected white goods
- AdvancedMC plug connector from Harting boasts enhanced contact reliability
- Renesas regroups for growth
- Vibration harvesters designed to replace AA, AAA batteries
- Hubris, lessons from Apple antenna debacle
- WiMax shrinking, LTE has issues
- BMW e-car will feature lightweight construction
- Analyst: Nokia's modem move hints at Intel-Infineon done deal
- Opinion: M'soft may not survive post-PC era
- NSN takes $1.2B slice of Motorola
- Reversible USB connector fits into ports either ways
- Brookhaven takes another shot at room-temp superconductors
- World's first see-thru glass window capable of generating electricity is ready for unveiling
Cypress and Future Electronics jointly developed the low-cost PSoC 3 Development Board, a package showcasing the ease-of-use of Cypress's new PSoC 3 architecture.
The Future Electronics PSoC 3 development board includes a on-board debug/programmer, a CapSense touch pad interface, tricolor red/green/blue LEDs, and a user USB interface. The board is powered though USB ports and two connectors are available for I/Os and expansion boards.
READER OFFER
This month, Cypress is giving away three such kits, worth USD249 each, for EETimes Europe's readers to win.
This site contains articles under license from EETimes Group , a division of United Business Media LLC.


