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Intel Faces $1.3B Fine In Europe

Hugh Pickens writes "European antitrust regulators, who have been aggressively pursuing what they see as anticompetitive practices among technology companies, could impose their largest fine ever in a market-dominance case against Intel. The commission began investigating Intel in 2000 after Advanced Micro Devices, its arch-rival, filed a complaint. In two sets of charges, in 2007 and 2008, the commission accused Intel of abusing its dominant position in chips by giving large rebates to computer makers, by paying computer makers to delay or cancel product lines, and by offering chips for server computers at prices below actual cost. Some legal experts speculate that Intel's fine could reach about a billion euros, or $1.3B. 'I'd be surprised if the fine isn't as high or higher than in the Microsoft case,' said an antitrust and competition lawyer in London. In 2004 Microsoft paid a fine of €497M, or $663M at current exchange rates, after being accused of abusing its dominance; the EU imposed another $1.3B fine in Feb. 2008."

34 of 280 comments (clear)

  1. Ouch! by Spatial · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I like Intel's hardware, it's really impressive. But that kind of crap can't go unpunished and it's nice to see a penalty with some teeth, even if it's only potential teeth right now.

    1. Re:Ouch! by reashlin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem is not intel selling high quality goods for a low price. The problem is intel using their size and market dominance to threaten retailers into not using competitors products. Intel have been ensuring by force that AMD are not even getting a chance to hit "shelves" with their products. That really is a bad things for everyone.

    2. Re:Ouch! by Sunshinerat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Exactly, when Intel finally pushes AMD out of business, the practice of selling server class hardware below market will no longer continue. The loss will be recovered, this time by one single vendor.

      We have seen this before, however, an open source chip maker producing free chips is not so likely. That is why Intel must be kept in line.

      --
      Load New Commander (Y/N)?
    3. Re:Ouch! by Timothy+Brownawell · · Score: 4, Insightful

      For example, the RepRap project, while far from having a tool that can manufacture chips, could in theory be advanced until it is capable of doing so.

      RepRap is a toy and a joke, and works in a way that cannot be used to produce chips even if it could be shrunk sufficiently.

      It's not like computer chips require expensive materials to manufacture. They're made of the cheapest stuff on earth.

      The expense comes from the amount of work needed to prepare the materials and make the manufacturing equipment.

      Hell, if a government that isn't motivated by profit and leverage were to seize one of those fabs, they could use them to make hundreds of chips for every man, woman and child on earth.

      Given that companies will often have more than one fab and can still be limited by manufacturing capacity, I think you're overestimating how much could be produced.

      The scarcity only exists because we allow them to shut the things off and hold them over our heads like carrots to make us jump.

      Or, you know, because they're bloody expensive to build and operate. Or can you make plasma etchers, ion implantation machines, photolithography machines, etc, in your basement?

    4. Re:Ouch! by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1, Insightful

      There's a big, huge, glaring hole in your argument.

      Intel engaged in anti-competitive behavior. This is expensive to implement. It is also risky. If you get caught doing it, you could lose out big time.

      There's only one reason you engage in anti-competitive behavior. That reason would be, you know what you're doing is easy enough that others could do it too, and most likely better than you're doing it, and for less cost.

      So, while you might believe that it's incredibly hard and expensive to do what Intel does, Intel themselves demonstrated by their own deeds that they do not believe you are right.

      Explain to me why I am wrong. If you can.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
  2. Is there any point? by AnalPerfume · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As much as I like to see anti-competitive practices punished, I'd rather the US regulators would do their job on occasion, not just the EU. Many of the companies who have been accused of anti-competitive practices are US companies, so the PR hit of being fined by their own side would perhaps hit home more than outsiders. That aside, is there any point to these huge fines? Guess who it's going to be passed onto? Intel gets fined and I suspect that by some remarkable coincidence the prices of their chips mysteriously increase.

    1. Re:Is there any point? by paziek · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And suddenly their chips aren't so good in comparison to AMD. Yes, there is a point.

    2. Re:Is there any point? by JustinOpinion · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Guess who it's going to be passed onto? Intel gets fined and I suspect that by some remarkable coincidence the prices of their chips mysteriously increase.

      Yeah that's the point.

      Intel have been able to keep their market share artificially high by abusing their dominance. This has made it difficult for other companies to compete. If Intel is forced to raise prices to cover the fines, then this gives other companies the chance to gain market share by competing on price.

      In other words, the fine restores some amount of competition, as intended, and serves as a deterrent against continuing to abuse dominance, as intended.

    3. Re:Is there any point? by Gat0r30y · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Fines don't seem to be particularly good - breaking up market collusion and creating a more competitive marketplace would seem to be the goal. I'm no economist but it would seem to me that breaking up giants like Intel into many smaller companies could be more effective - but the crux of this seems to be that the R&D at this point is all toward smaller lithography processes. With only two major players in this market there is still significant incentive to invest in R&D but with more players it might be hard for each company to justify the massive costs of producing newer/better/faster processes.

      --
      Prediction: The real iPhone killer is going to be sex robots from Japan. Think about it.
    4. Re:Is there any point? by samwise668 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As an european i'd say let the europeans benefit from the fines if the US is not interested in punishing those who broke the law by abusing their monopoly.

    5. Re:Is there any point? by Explodicle · · Score: 2, Insightful

      it would seem to me that breaking up giants like Intel into many smaller companies could be more effective

      The EU doesn't have the authority to break up a US-based company. Fines are one of their few options.

    6. Re:Is there any point? by holmstar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Right, so If I have 10 billion in cash, and you have 1 billion in cash, I can drop the price on my product to well below cost, and take the hit. If you try to do the same you will run out of money before I do, and I will win. And THEN i can raise my price back to where I think it should be, ie 2 or three times the cut rate price.

      So what you are suggesting is that you want to pay a higher price for what will become a rather mediocre product. (why try to make a better product if you don't have any competition? Research costs a lot of money.)

    7. Re:Is there any point? by Joce640k · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The core isn't necessarily broken. They'll use broken ones if there's any coming off the line but if there aren't any they'll use perfectly good quad-cores for this.

      Normally the "disable" is done with those tiny resistors soldered on the outside of the chip. Maybe one of yours isn't soldered properly.

      --
      No sig today...
    8. Re:Is there any point? by kaffiene · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ...and then AMD can undercut them, sell lots of product and everyone wins except Intel. What's the problem with that?

      What you suggest would only be the inexcapable outcome if Intel were already a monopoly, which - thanks to legal actions like this from the EU - they are not yet.

  3. to be fair... by advocate_one · · Score: 1, Insightful

    the money should be going to AMD who suffered from Intel's actions, not the coffers of the EU beaurocracy...

    --
    Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
    1. Re:to be fair... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      > There's no legal justification

      Apparently, the court disagrees with you. Thanks for playing.

    2. Re:to be fair... by drsquare · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The EU does not have the ability to raise or levy taxes. And they fine EU corporations too.

      You're just one of those whiny Americans throwing a tantrum because your precious corporations can't ignore all the laws like they do at home.

  4. Playing Fair by CopaceticOpus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's a good thing that there is someone keeping these giant companies accountable, since the US system isn't going to enforce anything. Remember the DOJ's anti trust case against Microsoft? Microsoft technically lost that one, but it didn't seem to cost them anything.

    We need to enforce a fair playing ground where companies can legitimately compete. AMD has been the biggest impetus keeping Intel's chips moving forward and keeping their prices lower.

    1. Re:Playing Fair by AnalPerfume · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Perhaps the EU should introduce a second tier of punishment for anti-competitive practices. Those who are found guilty have only one chance to change their ways with independent observers allowed to go anywhere in the company, examine any documentation etc. Failure to comply means the second tier kicks in and the company is banned from doing business at all anywhere within the EU for a length of time. You could have the ban in place until observers are satisfied that things have changed, and those responsible at boardroom level have been removed from office. The banning could also be an option for first offenders depending on the seriousness of the offense.

  5. Re:WTF EU by erroneus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is a practice called "DUMPING" designed to force the competition to either operate at a loss until they die or simply give up in the marketplace. Afterward, of course, the perpetrators jack their prices beyond what it should be, slow R&D so they can sell their old stuff faster and then set about abusing the market as a monopoly unimpeded.

    Yes, indeed, it is illegal to "dump" your stuff in order to harm the competition.

  6. Re:It's illegal to make contractual sales in the E by TheMeuge · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Again, unless they're giving these chips away, what's the problem? I'd be inclined to do the same thing, and I'd be shocked and amazed if the OEMs didn't suggest it and perhaps even push the idea themselves. (But honestly, both sides stand to profit from the arrangement. Follow the money...)

    Well... this is the Wallmart Syndrome at its finest. Sell at or below cost until your competitors are bankrupt.

    Just because Intel has money to burn, doesn't make it right. I don't see why anyone would encourage these practices, because they lead artificially deflated market prices for goods, coupled with monopolization, and sandwiched on top of a liquidity crisis. Does that sound familiar?

    Because it should.

    The consumers lose... the stockholders lose... Nobody wins here, except whoever got rich in the meanwhile.

  7. Re:WTF EU by m.ducharme · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In that alternate dimension where governments, not corporations, get to decide what the laws are. If Intel wants to do business in Europe, they have to abide by European law.

    --
    Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
  8. Re:Plunder by an.echte.trilingue · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Governments need someone to pay for the huge debt they're accumulating. Hey Intel, these guys, they have money. We can take it and spend it on programs that will make us look good, potentially reelected.

    Sickening.

    Please. It is a government. It can just print money if it wants to. As painful as the resulting inflation would be, that would be preferable to damaging the reputation of the rule of law on the continent.

    Cue the brainwashed anti-trust crowd.

    I think you misspelled "believers free economies"

    --
    weirdest thing I ever saw: scientology advertising on slashdot.
  9. Re:WTF EU by Red+Flayer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In what alternate dimension does the EU exist where the above are illegal? Because AMD isn't large enough to do the same they get to have the EU demand minimum prices on processors?

    Not an alternate dimension. This dimension. This plane.

    Intel had a market-dominating position, with AMD barely sniffing that their knees in the early 2000s. They also had a big fat cash surplus. So, they decided that by selling at a loss, they could keep AMD from breaking into the market; once AMD was bankrupted, or not able to compete, then they could raise their prices back up and begin raking in the cash.

    This is a very, very classic example of anti-competitive behavior. It doesn't get much more textbook than this.

    Because AMD isn't large enough to do the same they get to have the EU demand minimum prices on processors?

    No. Because Intel was dominant in the market, they couldn't sell at a loss to drive a much smaller competitor out of the market.

    Note that this is illegal in the US as well as in the EU. I suggest before you get your panties in a wad about how this possibly couldn't be illegal, you actually bother finding out why it's illegal.

    --
    "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  10. Re:WTF EU by Ecuador · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You have no idea what anti-trust is all about, do you?
    First of all, the rebates were not to all computer makers, they were to computer makers who would not carry AMD. So, if you were a computer maker that wanted to carry Intel, and you WOULD want to carry Intel since they were a near monopoly and for one reason or the other many of your clients would ask for Intel, then you would be at a price disadvantage if you also wanted to carry AMD.
    Secondly, Intel was making enough money having most of the desktop market, yet AMD was gaining server market share with superior server products, so Intel tried to remove the competition from that market by going below cost until the competition was done.
    So, it is not "illegal" when there are two companies on fair competition, size (actually market penetration) is indeed a factor and that is why there are anti-trust laws, which try to protect the consumer.
    Let me give you an example in the US. I have heard cases where small ISP's started offering better/faster service than the large Cable providers in some areas. The Cable provider would suddenly undercut the small ISP by pricing at a loss at that specific area of service (which was only a fraction of the provider's total service so no real financial harm), which would force the small ISP close down. After that the prices were restored to even higher levels than before. So there are similar below-cost anti-trust laws like the EU, but sometimes companies get around them by claiming "limited time special deals" etc
    So, do you think that Intel would keep selling below cost after AMD was done for? I am old enough to remember very well how much Intel CPU's used to cost before AMD started being competitive. Do you?

    --
    Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
  11. Re:Socialism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    No. That's an attempt at having real free markets for you. Or as close an approximation as is possible in real world anyway.

    A free market doesn't work if the players in the market are allowed to alter the market's structure to their advantage. If someone tries, the way the EU deals with it is by slapping them down hard.

  12. Re:Plunder by macraig · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Please. Nobody prints money to create money any more... that's old school. They just make more loans and then sell the "paper" to some sucker as if it's tangible. The mortgage on your house effectively "printed" some more money.

  13. Re:WTF EU by Timothy+Brownawell · · Score: 2, Insightful

    abusing its dominant position in chips by giving large rebates to computer makers, ... and by offering chips for server computers at prices below actual cost

    In what alternate dimension does the EU exist where the above are illegal?

    I think the "rebates" one depends on what the rebates are for. If it's something like a volume discount, it's probably ok. If it's something like "discount for not using AMD chips", it's probably not. I think something like the latter was one of the complaints in the US antitrust case against Microsoft.

    Selling your main product below cost as standard practice (ie, not just for getting rid of outdated inventory) only makes sense to try to starve out a competitor who doesn't have enough cash reserves, and so I understand is generally considered predatory pricing which tends to be illegal.

  14. Re:Finning the consumer? by mpapet · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Consumers were already paying more for Intel's anti-competitive behavior. The costs of corruption were being factored into the cost of their products already.

    What disappoints me more is the moral turpitude that is rewarded and clearly condoned at Intel. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_turpitude

    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
  15. Re:I'm confused by Chris+Burke · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How are most of these practices problematic? Why should there be anything wrong with them selling chips for servers at below cost? Yes, it keeps them dominant but the result is cheaper servers for the rest of us. If the point of anti-trust regulations is to benefit the consumer then it isn't clear to me what the problem is with that aspect.

    It can be confusing, if you only think about the cheaper servers you get today. If you had been around before AMD was competing with Intel on more than the budget desktop space, or even worse when AMD was nothing more than a second-source supplier of x86 chips, then you'd see the danger inherent in this and be petrified. Do you know how much Intel charged for a server chip before the Opetron came out? A high-end Xeon could cost you $4000 just for the processor. Shortly after the Opetron, that dropped to just over $1k. When they had no competition in the server market, they could charge whatever they wanted, and they used the buckets of money made there to fund price wars with AMD on the desktop. When they had no competition in the desktop market, they simply charged whatever they wanted for all their chips.

    So today you get cheap servers, sold below cost and funded by Intel's significant cash reserves and still quite high margins in laptops. Tomorrow, when cash-strapped debt-laden AMD folds because they can't afford to sell chips below cost, Intel once again has the market to itself. And. You. Don't. Want. That.

    Whether it should be illegal or not is debatable, but whether it's good for you in anything but the very short term is not.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  16. Yah, NOT going to happen by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Remember that little crisis we are in. No not the war on terror. No not swine-flu. Or the bird-flu. No not the high oil-price that one is over. No it ain't the low oil price either. The credit CRISIS! Geez pay attention will you!

    Anyway, the cause of it all is big american companies who got so big they also fell under EU regulation convincing the EU that the US regulation was though enough. The EU swallowed that ONCE and look what happened. Dead, misery, war, starvation!... well okay, a suicide, some fat cats moaning, just the same old wars as before and call girls making less money (newsoutlets in holland are so desperate for a desperate story they are now running how the sex industry is collapsing... in germany. Because all the ones in holland say they are doing fine, just a bit less trade because fewer americans are visiting (and doesn't that just say a lot about the good old US of A)).

    Anyway, US has no regulation and won't be having any either. That is what you get when you elect between Wall Street Front guy #1 and Wall Street Front guy #2. You only pick really is wether they are more strongly tied to the hollywood lobby or the gun lobby.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  17. Re:Fine Them out of Business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    no physical presence? By selling virtual cpus then, I guess. Taking your ball and going home because you don't want to play by the rule would be a good way to get your stuff declared contraband. And who would run these "distributors", btw? These people don't get paid, but should just be happy to be allowed shoveling Intel stuff? And how do you stop these "distributors" from getting slapped silly because they are the middle-men? Sorry, your entire argument have more holes than a swiss cheese and is unable to support itself.

  18. Re:WTF EU by gerglion · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It wasn't just 'dumping' that they are being investigated for. They were preventing AMD from entering markets through condition-based incentives; i.e. 'I will give you {discounts,rebates} if you don't sell product from {AMD,other competition}.' It is fairly hard to compete in a market that refuses to let you in.

    --
    I know you have come to kill me.
    Shoot, coward. You are only going to kill a man.
  19. Re:Then why not give the $ to AMD? by Anspen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    However, you're right that the EU is also motivated by the money, and the judgment is likely to be skewed by a conflict of interest.[..] That would be the most fair because the EU regulators would not have a conflict of interest. It would also really help those companies (ok, AMD) who were hurt by Intel's practices to regain ground that they lost.

    And your basing the existence on a conflict of interest on what? Money from fines is put into the general budget, which is agreed upon long beforehand. Any extra income does not mean the commision gets to spend more, it just means the member states pay less (and that's not even taking into account that the commission has far less control over the money it does have than most governments). By that logic all financial penalties, including fines and tickets should not go be paid to originating party.