AMD Claims Intel Inadvertently Destroyed Evidence in Antitrust Case 90
Marcus Yam writes "In an unpublished statement to the U.S. District Court of Delaware, AMD alleges Intel allowed the destruction of evidence in pending antitrust litigation. According to the opening letter of the AMD statement, 'Through what appears to be a combination of gross communication failures, an ill-conceived plan of document retention and lackluster oversight by outside counsel, Intel has apparently allowed evidence to be destroyed.'"
Well... (Score:3, Funny)
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That is a bit silly (Score:5, Informative)
Suggesting that the inability to search e-mail in legacy systems is "destruction of evidence" is more than a bit silly in my personal opinion.
sPh
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And speaking of silly...
The Email Server^H^H^H^H^H^H Shop
Investigator: This is an email server, isn't it?
IT Worker: Finest in the company.
Investigator: Explain the logic underlying that conclusion, please.
IT Worker: Well, it's so clean, sir.
Investigator: It's certainly uncontaminated by email.
Re:That is a bit silly (Score:5, Insightful)
Describing it as accidental destruction of evidence though is perfectly accurate, at least from a non-technical legal point of view.
"Through what appears to be a combination of gross communication failures, an ill-conceived plan of document retention and lackluster oversight by outside counsel, Intel has apparently allowed evidence to be destroyed."
That's pretty much what you're describing, right? Large organizations with completely inadequate data retention, which inevitably destroys data irrespective of that data's importance, in large degree because the company just doesn't have a solid plan in place? That's all AMD is alleging, that their system was inadequate to the task, not that Intel deliberately crippled their email system to lose emails they didn't want showing up during discovery. The fact that this isn't uncommon in email systems makes the argument more believable, not less.
If they were alleging deliberate destruction of evidence, that would be a whole different ball of wax.
Data Retention part is True (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Data Retention part is True (Score:5, Insightful)
Almost like a policy of data loss.
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If something is needed for archival, then it can be stored appropriately. The simple truth is the bulk of any large org's e-mail is not essential to anything. Why save all of it? make the users save what they need. Personally I like Intel's thought on the issue.
It's not like that can't archive processor designs and such, just why archive spam, inter-office bullsh!t, like love letters, plans for the pub and whatnot (ok, the loveletters may be interesting reading...)
-nB
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Because "processor designs and such" do not contain intentions, motivations and business decisions based upon anti-competitive practices. Amidst all that noise is possibly an e-mail gem sent to a distribution group describing some, shall we say, shady business decisions. This e-mail could have spurre
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Seriously, what ever gave anyone the idea that email "must" be saved? This move to require archiving IMs is equally intrusive and ridiculous, because next they'll require saving all voice conversations... after all, A/V IM is here already, and it's not too great a leap to go from archiving IM to archiving A/V IM to archiving phone calls....
heres why (Score:2)
And if you don't think they are hanging corporations (rightly and wrongly), you are kidding yourself.
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I'm betting that they're using Lotus Notes. 7 days' retention seems a bit excessive for your average Notes server - so they must have a super-powerful Notes server to manage that much data.
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That's not to say that another solution would be more efficient with hardware than Notes, but I highly doubt Intel is hurting for hardware to manage their Notes s
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The issue may be "Litigation Hold" (Score:1)
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That's simple... Intel should have saved all of the email because they were under a court order to save all of it.
True (Score:2)
Handy if you are a corporate attorney.
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yeah but for email? (Score:1)
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I guess without this sort of thing affecting your business and the possibility or likelihood of withstanding lawsuits, emails would be destroyed much quicker (in the time frame the AC mentioned). U
don't be fooled (Score:5, Informative)
3007 (Score:2)
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Pentium bug (Score:3, Funny)
Sorry, AMD.
YRO?? (Score:2, Insightful)
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It concerns your right to be an AMD or Intel fanboy. If you're an AMD fanboy you have right to smugly assert that AMD's on-die memory controller makes them 50% less of an evil soulless corporation than Intel. If you're an Intel fanboy you have the right so smugly assert that Intel is is evil at smaller die sizes.
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- You have a right, when suing other people, to force them to retain their online correspondence, so that you can use discovery to find evidence against them among it.
- Others have a right, when suing YOU, to force YOU to retain YOUR online correspondence, so that THEY can use discovery to find evidence aginst YOU among it.
- These override the defendant's "right to privacy" as related to his online correspondence in the civil suit.
Make sense now?
Not like Intel is a technology company... (Score:2)
Poor AMD (Score:2, Insightful)
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If you have reason to believe that your opponents have (or may have, or potentially will have) lost (whether due to policy, tampering, or accident) data that may potentially be useful, you make a note of it as early as possible. There are specif
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Because those attorneys represent AMD in court.
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Re:Poor AMD - RTA (Score:5, Informative)
The court instructed Intel to retain all email for 1027 case-specific individuals from the data of case initiation ie 2005.
This has nothing to do with leaving AMD in a not so great light; but it does have everything to do with Intel not properly following court orders - Intel even admitted they screwed up!
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Wait, I guess we already know the answer to that.
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The court instructed Intel to retain all email for 1027 case-specific individuals from the data of case initiation ie 2005.
...where did the 3 extra people come from?
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What AMD is actually looking for is a "we must crush AMD" type email that looks like bad press for Intel. Of course, in real life all companies say stuff like that in email, including AMD - it's part of the business culture. Like you, this makes me view AMD as a sleazy company one (small) step above patent trolls and spa
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It sure is too bad you don't know anything about the case involved as it contradicts pretty much everything you just said. There were specific emails from 2005 back when litigation began that Intel was supposed to hold and they neglected to do so. At the time the emails were not deleted, they were deleted after the court ordered them to hold it. They screwed up, they admitted to it. Not necessarily evil on the Intel front. I've seen cases where email gets lost. In any case, AMD is hardly trolling as Intel h
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This is a very simple process with Lotus Domino. How many e-mails is that? About 9 million.
Don't tell me it can't be done, I've seen it.
Sheesh (Score:2, Interesting)
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Well, don't ever expect to get a job at Intel!
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Intel acknowledges losing docs (Score:3, Informative)
Go Down Over This (Score:3)
When a government contractor returned the notebook computer he'd been given to perform his job with only the files on it that had been there when it had been given to him (government claiming that he was setting up his own competing business during the time he worked for the government, and they expected to find evidence on the notebook once they got it back, but he used, IIRC, a legal secure delete program) they maintainted that the LACK OF data was proof of his guilt.
Does this just happen to the little guy, or should the court now find fully in AMD's favor here? And in the process, send a strong message to all of big business?
After all, this is the same government being pushed to make ISPs retain even more of your personal Internet activities. Shouldn't the punishments be spread around more equally?
Not all email (Score:5, Informative)
It's not all email from all Intel employees that must be retained
1027 case-specific individuals at Intel were identified and from 2005 case initiation date Intel is supposed to have all of their email retained; of these 1027 case-specific persons AMD is allowed to stipulate 471 for court scrutiny of data.
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Retaining 1027 individuals email from 2005 forward makes it considerably easier than retaining all email for all Intel employees.
And it's 1027 out of approximately 100,000 employees, the 471 is 471 out of the 1027 case-specific individuals
As to "not working perfectly" and "herding cats" - it didn't even work adequately - Intel rep's even admits that they screwed up - from a sheer technical perspective this was/is not a difficult exercise for a firm of this size/type with the resources it has at it's com
Plausible Deliability (Score:2)
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Or Bosnia about Serbian genocide
I don't know much about the other examples you mentioned. But I don't see how this one goes with your reasoning. The link you provided points out that:
"Serbia has not conspired to commit genocide, nor incited the commission of genocide; Serbia has not been complicit in genocide."
and:
the UN's highest court did decide that the Srebrenica massacre was indeed an act of genocide and that Serbia had had the power to prevent it but did not do so
So There was an act of genocide, but it was not perpetrated by Serbia. So how should they be guilty for it?? It would be like my neighbour telling me they will kill everyone in their household, then going to do it. Me knowing that it is occuring does not make me liable for his actions, does it? (even if I could have stopped it the moment he told me)
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The court found that somehow the Serbian government was not in control of the Serbian army when it genocided the Bosnians.
Yes, because it was not the Serbian army. It was the Bosnian Serb army. Just because both armies have "serb" in them does not make them the same. Hence the Serbian government had no control, The Bosnian Serb government did, whose leader ordered the siege and massacre (with his military commanders warning him that it would be classed as genocide) and as such is an indicted war criminal (and rightly so).
A Serbian government that publicly directed the genocide.
Actually... Most of the public did not know it was going on. During the war they were fed propaganda by
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Now you can go back to quibbling about some Intel email, and pretend you're not responsible for voting in the killers you're still defending against the humans. Fucking Anonymous dead Coward.
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Actually, ask them about Governor Kathleen Blanco and Mayor Ray Nagin.
Making the disaster plan, and executing the plan for the first three days WITHOUT external help, was the responsibility of the locality. FEMA assistance wasn't supposed to be counted on until the fourth day - and even then it's just materiel and money to HELP the state and locality run THEIR plan, not a
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I've lost mail... (Score:2)
At work, though, I've inadvertently lost several years worth of email (at least 3+ years). Outlook archived them
Might as well find them a monopoly (Score:2)
Steve Jobs to Linus: "Hey, lets collude and force Microsoft out of the market"
Linus: "Sure, done deal!"
Not much to worry about there.
If a company can break the law just by having specific intentions, we might as well consider them a monopoly and take remedial actions. In case of Intel, they could be required to spin off chip design into a separate company from manufacturing. As Microso