Intel Settles NY Antitrust Case
clustermonkey writes "Intel Corporation and the New York Attorney General have agreed to terminate the lawsuit alleging violation of U.S. and state antitrust laws that was filed by the New York Attorney General in November 2009. Intel did not have to admit any violation of law (if there ever was any) nor did it have to admit or deny that the allegations in the complaint are true. Most importantly, the settlement does not require any changes to how the company does business. The settlement includes a $6.5 million payment that is "intended only to cover some of the costs incurred by the New York Attorney General in the litigation." Here's the full settlement, and Intel's official press release."
I don't understand. From the Summary it looks a lot like Legal extortion in that Intel paid to have this go away.
This comes on the heels of a late-2011 court ruling which “greatly reduced the scope of the New York Attorney General’s lawsuit.”
Which court ruling? /. at the time
I can't remember to see something on
Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
It's pretty much a one-sided decision - Intel has bought out the Democrats of New York and they capitulated !!
6.5 million dollars ? What's that, again?
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
In the end, Intel gets double-jeopardy protection for the bargin-bin price of funding the NY AG office for a couple years. It's like bribery, but way more efficient.
a bribe.
Because there is no such thing as a "standard x86 extension listing" - Intel test the optimisations for all CPUs they target, so do you expect Intel to have to also test competitors chips or do you expect them to just hope everything works fine on an Athlon as well? No, the correct thing to do is assume nothing works.
AMD can always release their own compiler...
Again, as well they should - they are not beholden to test extensions and optimisations on third party chips, only their own. If its not their chip, then they cannot be 100% sure that the maker of said chip has implemented everything correctly and they should be disabled.
I still do not see an actual issue here, just a perceived issue thats being pushed by those who really want to find a problem with Intel.