EU Regulator Raids Intel Offices 138
stevedcc writes "BBC news is reporting that Intel's offices in Munich, Germany have been raided by European Union competition regulators. From the article: 'The Reuters news agency reported that the Commission also raided computer retailers on Tuesday including Germany's Media Markt, which sells PCs with Intel central processing units but not those made by AMD. Regulators have the power to fine Intel up to 10% of annual turnover if they find it guilty of stifling competition. Intel has said it is "confident" it had acted lawfully.'"
The line forms to the right (Score:4, Funny)
Where do I get in line for this?
Re:The line forms to the right (Score:5, Insightful)
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No, they are trying to eliminate the competitor(s). And by the way, this means that they are effectively competing.
Your idea of the company bankrupting the other company is a misunderstanding. This happens extremely rarely; the overall cost of selling at a loss for a long time > the cost of competing for the future. Intel isn't try to do this at all, and it would need an absurd market situation for it to work, even if they wanted to. The actual situa
Re:The line forms to the right (Score:4, Insightful)
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And saying Intel is a monopoly, at this point, is laughable. Unfair practices? Perhaps. We will find out. But they aren't a monopoly yet.
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Monopolies with prices that are exorbitant compared to the natural price rarely exist without a technical, legal or otherwise unavoidable monopoly (USA broadband operators for the technical monopoly (dubious though that is), Microsoft for the legal monopoly).
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I think companies are generally not far sighted enough to take this into account. And rightly so; this is an extremely hard judgement to make.
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I have this widget, which normally sells for $5. If I want to sell it for $2.50, what right has anyone to say I can't? Again, I say, it's government price fixing. They are setting a minimum sale price threshold.
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I have this widget, which cost me $2 to make. I sell it for $1.
The goal is to move on to this:
Though I take a loss on every sale, the competition is a smaller business and cannot take the loss for as long as I can. Once they arebankrupt from either no one buying their products because mine are cheaper or also selling at below cost with their coffers running out sooner, I can then sell my widgets, that were previously $1 and cost me $2 to make,
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You don't know that is their goal. Maybe it's to sell Widget Y, which requires the widget I'm subsidizing (see: XBOX 360). Maybe they are getting rid of old stock (selling it below cost is better than junking and you get other benefits as well [overstock.com]).
What I'm saying is, anytime you let the gov't tell you that you can't do something, you get rid of business models that work. Like the two examples cited above. You may be fine with that, but I'm not. Give the consum
Re:The line forms to the right (Score:5, Insightful)
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Exactly, buying something at the lowest price now != being a rational actor in a market economy. It's the line of thinking that the only cost associated with doing business is the one I see right in front of me that has led to the credit crunch, the negative savings rate, and just about every other economic problem we have now. If we could please just squash that now, we would all be a lot better off. You save a few bucks now by going with a cheaper product,
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Your "informed economic decision" effecitvely rewards a company for poor performance. Not only that but it gets you, t
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Re:The line forms to the right (Score:4, Informative)
For example, they may develop a much faster incompatible chip which can run virtual machines emulating x86 at the same speed as a real x86 chip. Or they may just take AMD's IP and build on it to create a competitive chip and use someone else's fabs.
High prices from a monopoly on a non-supply limited item are part of the marketplace. It drives innovation. So in the end, I don't even find your "worst case" scenario all that bad. But on a realistic front, AMD isn't going out of business. Even if they bankrupt their products will still be made and sold for the forseeable future by _someone_.
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If that where right 100% of the time then where is the competition for microsoft?
You're joking, right? There is tons of competition for Microsoft. Linux in hundreds of variations, Apple, Open/FreeBSD, [Open],Solaris, and uncountable niche OS's. In the application space there are all kinds of products in every field they sell in that compete as well. This exactly highlights my point. People didn't like MS OS's and/or their prices, so they went and developed Linux and all the other OS's.
And that's precisely why MS doesn't charge a ridiculous amount of money for their product, they
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Apple's OSX is tied to Aplle machines, of the Linux distros, only a handful come in question for the average user, and the the same goes for the rest.
A true alernative would have to be compatible, interchangable and fully legal. As it is, anybody who goes to buy 99% of software pruducts, will need to have MS Windows.
Re:The line forms to the right (Score:4, Informative)
All those differentiations you speak about will suffer if there is only one manufacturer. And we all know how well the government busts up monopolies, so if you have any vested interest in CPU's, support AMD.
Please do tell how promoting an actual market is a misguided sense of "econ-101." Note I was speaking about the specific AMD situation when making my argument. I'm not here to argue if all things are equal between the two, just that having AMD around is important.
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Investing in AMD doesn't. It promotes competition and a more efficient market.
You're effectively giving charity to AMD. They can't win your money by making the best product, but you're convinced that it will somehow serve you in the long run. I don't know how you can rationally make such an analysis, but I certainly wouldn't bet on it if I were you. Your presumption seems to be that your dollars are going to go towards improving AMD. Do you have any evidence of this? How do you know your dollars aren't going towards the big-wigs in the company? Or huge inefficiencies? Or the
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You're effectively giving charity to AMD. They can't win your money by making the best product, but you're convinced that it will somehow serve you in the long run. I don't know how you can rationally make such an analysis, but I certainly wouldn't bet on it if I were you.
I also prefer the AMD brand in general, so much that even if they are marginally worse in price/performance at a particular time for a particular purpose, I would probably not buy the Intel chip, and I don't mind explaining my rationale. The price/performance difference would have to be quite a bit to get me to seriously consider Intel, because I remember the pressure their introduction put on Intel's prices not so long ago, and more recently I remember how quickly they surpassed Intel in performance, and
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Best Processors (Score:3, Insightful)
$35 or $150, wow that is a tough one.
Again, Intel isn't always the best processor.
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Thanks to the fact that there's no easy way to compare which processor is supposed to match up with which when it comes to comparing brands- the only way I find you can compare processors is price class. I find every AMD processor I've tested outperforms it's Intel same-price-class counterpart in benchmarks.
Since we can't compare things like mhz anymore, all we have are benchmarks and price cla
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Interesting how this is balanced when it comes to the OS.
CC.
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Have you ever wondered why Intel cannot sell their processors at the same low price as AMD? The size, transistor count etc., are comparable. Does anyone really believe that the Intel Fab houses are more expensive (for 20 years) than AMD or others?
Some people think that the competition is "fair", and that Intel can se
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Look I understand the importance of competition, and I like having a choice. However if the AMD CPU is inferior, rewarding the company by giving it money for that CPU guarantees a DECREASE in quality overall even if a choice between 2 players remains. What incentive is there for anyone to make a good CPU if people will still buy the crap one.
Now if AMD put out a pr
Don't you mean (Score:3, Funny)
Gone Too Far (Score:5, Insightful)
When a group actually hates a company as much as people do here with Microsoft/Intel, it's easy to become overly biased against the rights of people to choose these two businesses.
Re:Gone Too Far (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Gone Too Far (Score:5, Insightful)
If this had always been true, it might be fair to say that AMD were a poor competitor. However, from the launch of the Athlon until the launch of the Core2, for several years, AMD had a better product, yet found major difficulties in getting market share. Intel's alleged tactics are illegal, and it's right that they should be properly investigated. It's just a pity that any fine imposed will hurt Intel but not benefit AMD or consumers, who are the real injured parties.
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In the CPU front, the Core 2 is spanking the Phenom in all market segments, although the Athlon series is still holding on to the very low-end on low cost alone.
On the GPU front, they just gave up on the high end entirely for a while. The only way they can even compete with nVidia's 8800 series (which is about to be replaced with new cards) is to stick two of the
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I tried to work Nazis in to my illustration, but failed.
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Ju
Re:Gone Too Far (Score:5, Interesting)
So this sort of behavior is definitely not a good thing. Except for Pfizer there for a while, anyway.
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That's fine (Score:3, Insightful)
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I would have to think it is (Score:2)
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It's exactly what they were doing when AMD was dominating the desktop and 1P/2P server performance with Athlon. They were giving big customers huge rebates on their desktop and 1P/2P server chips to keep AMD from gaining market share, while raking in the profits on the mobile and 4P+ server chip sales since they were still dominati
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There are almost zero examples of what you state actually occurring as you say it will. Normally because the cost to the dominant player of selling at a loss for a prolonged period of time is too high. Futhermore, you're confusing the word "cost" with "price". In this situation, the competitors are cutting prices below costs. They are not cutting costs.
I'm guessing you might not be a native speaker, so th
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As to Media Markt, if they wish to sell only the crap from Intel, why shouldn't they be allowed to? Simply because you don't "like" a company (...Microsoft...) doesn't mean in a free market, retailers should not be able to be exclusive.
The problem is not that Media Market was selling Intel because they liked them, but because they would get special deals from Intel if they DIDN'T sell AMD. That's what Intel (allegedly) does in markets where AMD might stand a chance.
Think of it as the Walmart strategy. They move into a town and sell everything below what they pay for it. There is no way that the local stores can compete and go out of business. When Walmart is the only game in town, they raise prices and shift those profits to the next
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Intel makes Apple CPU's now and as such they are beyond reproach!
And the Lord came ford and said, "You better recognize."
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This kind of mentality wrongly assumes that there is a sort of perfect market state that translates into people switching retailers/PC's as features/price change. This is totally untrue. Consumers of all kinds normally suffer all kinds of bad product based on a number of factors that can be generalized into the herd mentality. Look at how much consumers have been overcharged for CD's and DVD's.
Intel isn't the only one doing i
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If I want to change from an Intel to a AMD CPU, like I did last year, all you have to do is purchase the replacement CPU and an appropriate motherboard. All other perhipherals are usable under either system. It doesn't get much easier than that
Oh. If Only... (Score:2)
1. If you are running windows like most consumers in the world, you cannot do that without a fresh install of the OS. As more of these users are forced into Vista, this gets harder as there are license restrictions preventing this.
2. Regardless of OS, you understand that the bits and bobs are roughly interchangeable. You are in the minority.
3. the vast majority of computer users are not you and generally don't mind over paying for thei
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You should get your geek card suspended for a week. Not only is it possible to do without reinstalling the OS, it is pretty easy.
Step 1: Open the device manager and remove the chipset drivers
Step 2: Power down the system and replace the motherboard
Step 3: Boot system and install
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Like the AC said, I swapped out chips and motherboards without reinstalling Windows. Just installed updated firmware drivers and an AMD dual core patch to Windows and I was good to go.
Regardless of OS, you understand that the bits and bobs are roughly interchangeable. You are in
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I see where you are coming from, that people are paying higher prices than they would be in a better functioning market, but I'm not sure that the seller automatically gets blamed, or even that the situation needs remedy. Take something like tobacco -- essentially every single user would actually be better off in the long term if they stopped using tobacco, but if you asked them, on average, they aren't going
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Only to an extent. If what I will call the vendors' mistake (buying expensive processors) produces a difference i
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I'm pretty sure it isn't about prohibiting them to sell what they want.
It's a lot more likely they targeted MediaSaturn to gather evidence for illegal business practices by Intel, i.e. finding out whether the decision to go Intel-only is based on bribes, kickbacks etc.
Karma Calling? (Score:1, Flamebait)
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AMD has built some big expensive fabs in Germany (Score:4, Insightful)
What about Saturn? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Well, one can seriously wonder about people who buy computer equipment at Media Markt. They're yet another of those 'trick the consumer into visiting our shop by advertising products we don't have for prices we wont sell them for then talk them into a sale' corporations that don't even dare list their prices on comparison sites.
I wouldn't trust them to sell me an electric toothbrush, nevermind a CPU.
More raids (Score:2)
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It's like there's some guy in Brussels with a blindfold and a great big dartboard, each segment of it tagged with an industry ripe for legal harassment or something.
I mean, if they're that eager to insure competition and to stamp out anti-competitive behavior, then why not abandon the formal niceties (and periodic fi
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From what I've read I think that it's often a tip-off that starts the investigation, then they investigate that company which quite often is helpful and turns on the partners because that will lessen the fines from the co
Confident? (Score:1)
Me thinks maybe Intel got it's hand caught in the cookie jar and is now trying some slick lawyer way of denying that there were any cookies in the first place or some such thing.
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Printers? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Printers? (Score:5, Interesting)
That said, you raise an interesting point about where Intel/AMD make their money. Is it in the CPU or the Mobo's/Video Cards/etc that are optimized to work with the CPU?
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I think they make their money by having an effecient high volume plan including very high quality control. If 2 companies make a product, the high volume can do a lower cost per unit. If the defect rate makes 1/3 of one companies product hit the trash while the other company is shipping at 90% yield and is ahead on the performance curve, they can underprice the competition with volume, effeciency and scale. I think AMD had a
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AMD refused to enter the chipset and platform market in the 90s for a lack of ressources They let VIA, SIS and other 3rd parties provide the platform for their flagchip processors, which lead to many problems, as those were not really up to the task (usually good hardware, but not always stable drivers). When nvidia entered the platform market from the graphic side (with
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If the suspicions is of price rigging through threats to media markt, then perhaps there will be incriminating e-mails.
OTOH, We dont need incriminating e-mails to know that Lexmark are guilty - why not just fine them - a lot - I'd love lower taxes!
What is it supposed to achieve? (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean, come on. Its well known that governments will attempt to physically raid companies in search of the evidence they don't have. This is a high tech firm. Surely any sensible CEO would ensure that any questionable docs were held securely in another (corrupt) country, behind heavy duty encryption and only accessible by remote session.
Its not as if there would be a vast number of them, and the skills to make this invisible to the raiding agencies are not likely to be in short supply in somewhere like Intel.
All you can assume is that these raids are a show of force, not seriously expected to deliver anything of value.
Historical Monopolistic Practices (Score:2, Insightful)
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If AMD dies, someone else will take their place. Intel has done nothing that other industries don't do and punishing them for making better chips than AMD and exploiting that advantage is immoral. (Because that's what this really boils down to--AMD is not as equipped for survival as Intel is, and is suffering for it.)
Over and Over Again (Score:1)
Oh and I don't know how much help the raid is going to be, unless Intel gives them access to email servers and document storage servers.
Inside (Score:1)
Because the EU likes to go for the jugular.
Finally (Score:2)
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Did we see Intel raiding AMD offices with guns ? No.
Did we see Intel raiding their customers with guns ? Hell, no!