Samsung To Pay Out $300 Million In Anti-Trust Suit 227
infernalC writes "Reuters is reporting that Samsung has agreed to plea guilty to charges of price fixing in the memory market in a $300 million settlement." From the article: " Samsung would become the third chip maker to plead guilty in the wide-ranging probe of the prices of dynamic random access memory, or DRAM, chips. The Justice Department has blamed the price-fixing conspiracy for driving up the price of chips used in products ranging from personal computers and servers to cell phones, cameras and game consoles."
So expensive (Score:2, Funny)
Re:So expensive (Score:2)
And How Does This Help Me? (Score:5, Insightful)
This may enrich the justice department, computer companies, and/or their shareholders, but how does it help me?
If you want to... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2, Insightful)
Exactly.
are they planning on refunding each consumer of said chips a quarter each or something? or does it just mean Samsung loses money to greedy lawyers, so for the next 6 quarters Samsung will drive up the prices of the new chips (logally, maybel) to make up for it?
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:5, Insightful)
The government gets the extra cash, and of course the lawyers.
We the consumers, almost never get a break after its proven we overpaid.
I bet prices wont even drop after this, 'due to inflation'.
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2)
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2)
I'd reconsider buying Samsung, personally. Then you don't have to pay the settlement-inflated costs for their RAM, nor reward them for paying their "cost of doing business" fine after using illegal business practices.
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2)
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2)
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2)
So the memo
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2)
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:4, Informative)
And for the other legal retards out there, criminal fines are not normally divied up among members of the community; it goes into the treasury.
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2)
maybe next time, they'll learn to better hide their illegal ventures or not try it at all (nah!).
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2)
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2)
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2)
It gives the government ample motivation to sue companies the next time they are doing anything illegal. When the politicians stand to gain, they pull out all the stops.
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2)
Samsung isn't going to be too eager to engage in price fixing again. That's how it benefits you.
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2)
I can't answer that. I can say that there isn't a company on Earth that would shrug and say "whatever" at a 300 million dollar expenditure. A 3rd of a billion dollars is a lot of money, even to Microsoft.
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2, Insightful)
If Samsung made more than $300M, then (from their perspective) the gambit worked, and they should do it again.
Re:And How Does This Help Me? (Score:2)
Umm... ok. And your cartoonesque view of villainy is
"If Samsung made more than $300M, then (from their perspective) the gambit worked, and they should do it again."
Problem 1: A 300 million dollar loss is a 300 million dollar loss whether it was ill gained or not. What's the point in making that 300 million dollars if you need to hold onto it just in case the gov't decides they might want to investigate?
Problem 2: Ho
Holy moley... (Score:2, Funny)
$300M? (Score:5, Insightful)
Seems like these fines are just the cost of doing business. I'm sure that $300M is a lot less than their manufacturing charges, or even their advertising expenses.
Fines and Penalties (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Fines and Penalties (Score:5, Insightful)
And they do so without admitting guilt.
I wish I could break laws and not admit guilt.
I guess we should all become corporations. That way we could just disincorporate and reincorporate under a different name.
Beats going to jail.
Re:Fines and Penalties (Score:3, Interesting)
You can, it's called pleading "No Contest". It means you don't admit guilt, but it is easier/cheaper for you to accept a guilty verdict then to fight it.
-Rick
Re:Fines and Penalties (Score:3)
Often? Care to cite some numbers in support of your claim?
If you really buy into the Spitzer-following belief that big companies are evil and governments are clean,..
I don't, but I do know that corporations wield political control beyond their importance to society at large.
As for Spitzer, consider the numbers game that AIG performed. Not only did they settle, but they settled on *their* terms.
Keep it.
In many ways a lot of these settlement
Re:Fines and Penalties (Score:2)
Care to cite some numbers that disproves it, dickhead?
Ooooh! I hit a nerve!
Positive affirmation requires proof. You can't prove a negative.
>>You have just contradicted yourself. If their is a kernel of truth in the indictments, then they have criminal liability
Only in the world of tinfoil-helmeted simpletons
More personal attacks. I see weakness in your arguments already.
Re:Fines and Penalties (Score:2)
So O.J. should be reimbursed by LA county because they couldn't prove he kill his wife and her lover?
I don't think that is practical in criminal cases. You will probably see more vigilante killings if that practice were implemented.
I do think that your suggestion has merit in civil cases. But that would have to have limits on what a losing party would pay. Otherwise a corporation would load up the legal billings on their side i
Re:Fines and Penalties (Score:2)
This is about as far as I made it into your drivel,
Yeah, I figured you for a pussy.
however no - my reply was actually just an in-kind to your unnecessarily hostile response.
Yeah, bullshit. You replied to my original post, not the other way around.
It must be fun rewriting history.
I call the dickheads where I see them, and you sir, are one of them.
You know nothing about me other than what I write on Slashdot, which ain't much.
Re:$300M? (Score:2, Insightful)
$300 million is a lot of money to anyone - even a mega-corp.
Nonetheless, a better question would be the motivation and impartiality of governments. It seems that the US government is busy fining every "foreign" company in every way it can (usually bullying for multi-million, or BILLION, dollar settlements), adding the proceeds to the general slush fund (it seldom makes its way to consumers), and the European governments are busy taxing - sorry fini
Re:$300M? (Score:2)
Given the industry's total take on this scheme to raise chip prices overall- what percentage of profits do you think it is? Maybe 3%? With fines like that- it's a damned good business decision to break the law even if you think you'll get caught.
Re:$300M? (Score:2)
Most definitely, but they won't bat an eye at continuing conduct that draws those kinds of fines if they make $500 million for every $300 million they pay in fines.
Re:$300M? (Score:2)
But it's still lost profits for their shareholders. According to their stock website [samsung.com], there are 148 million outstanding shares, and 22 million outstanding preferred shares, with an annual 2% dividend.
From their website, their profits last year were 10,000 million US dollars, so 300 million is a good 3 percent of that. Given that shareholders will
Re:$300M? (Score:2)
Yes, but if they were conducting this scam over the course of more than several years, then the losses could be less than 1% per year.
Now I won't argue that the shareholders aren't hurt by the actions of manangement in this particular case. But the windfall that
Re:$300M? (Score:2)
Do we get any of our money back? (Score:4, Interesting)
So... (Score:3, Interesting)
Doesn't matter..... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Doesn't matter..... (Score:2)
Re:Doesn't matter..... (Score:2)
Public trans in the US is a joke, but I wish it wasnt.
Re:Doesn't matter..... (Score:2)
Re:Doesn't matter..... (Score:2)
Re:Doesn't matter..... (Score:2)
I live outside a largish city (Memphis, TN). Public transportation to every home in the suburbs is not practical. Even within the city where MATA buses run so regularly I always seem to be stuck behind one, few people ride the bus. I guarantee I will see three buses before I get the one block to the interstate. On those three desiel chugging buses there might be 10-15 people total. Far from
Re:Doesn't matter..... (Score:2)
Re:Doesn't matter..... (Score:2)
Interesting that you say that... because every example I can think of where public transportation systems are well developed and regularly used are in cities where the cost of living is much higher than it is in the suburbs. It's one of the reasons people move to the suburbs - to get more for less money.
Re:Doesn't matter..... (Score:2)
Re:Doesn't matter..... (Score:2)
Re:Doesn't matter..... (Score:2)
Re:Doesn't matter..... (Score:2)
What this translates to... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What this translates to... (Score:2)
What makes you think you're going to get a buck? The people who suffered from the overpriced memory won't get a single penny.
what about (Score:3, Interesting)
The Real Question... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The Real Question... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The Real Question... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The Real Question... (Score:2)
Re:The Real Question... (Score:3, Funny)
Why is it that every time someone mentions prison on
Re:The Real Question... (Score:2)
Re:The Real Question... (Score:2)
Cue the libertarian economists (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, from my way of thinking, $300 million, or even $485 million if you count the fine against the other chip manufacturer fined so far, is probably just a drop in the bucket compared to the money earned by this scheme. We're lucky to have a regulated economy where the government can do *something* about this at least- but if you think this is going to make those who like money more than people stop trying to destroy the free market, then I've got a bridge or six in Portland to sell you....
Re:Cue the libertarian economists (Score:2)
Look at software patents. Patents are an exclusive monopoly granted by the government. They're bad news for almost everybody out there except for a few greedy software shop executives.
I'm not advocating a totally free market, just that we understand the dangers of granting the government regulat
Re:Cue the libertarian economists (Score:2)
Absolutely true. Software patents, which you mention next, are an excellant example of this.
I'm not advocating a totally free market, just that we understand the dangers of granting the government regulatory power over our economy.
We did that far too much the day we let the government print m
Re:Cue the libertarian economists (Score:2)
Re:Cue the libertarian economists (Score:2)
I've looks at every theory. Most accepted ones are adjusted and shoehorned to fit unexpected results. the Austrian view predicts and explains inflation, bubbles, recessions and market growth.
Re:Cue the libertarian economists (Score:2)
But in the end, I'm a hacker first- and what keeps hitting me over the head is the fact that money is an invention, and economics ought to be engineered. Where it doesn't work, where it produces "unexpected results", those results need to be e
Re:Cue the libertarian economists (Score:2)
I advocate true deregulation due to what I see in markets and industries with little regulation: more choice, lower prices, better quality.
It is when regulations are incorporated that the consumers suffer. Regulations reduce businesses able to navigate the mandates, increase costs and sometimes enforce a monopoly.
Re:Cue the libertarian economists (Score:2)
Depends on your definition of "poverty"- there's a lot of power in being the supplier of food and other necessities to your family and neighbors.
I advocate true deregulation due to what I see in markets and industries with little regulation: more choice, lower prices, better quality.
I don't see that in markets with little regulation. What I see in markets with little regulation is less choice, higher prices as cor
Re:Cue the libertarian economists (Score:5, Interesting)
The Austrians (Mises, Hayek, Rothbard, Rockwell) point to the fact that money is a commodity affected by supply and demand and that prices are as well.
When you involve a million regulations, tariffs, taxes and fees, it is very difficult to scientifically attribute prices to reality. Fox example, gas. The price of gas is affected by too many government mandates to set an equation to. Mandated blends, refinery monopoly, distribution restrictions, price controls, etc. Did you know we sell our oil to Iraq for pennies a gallon? Government gas needs also raise prices by reducing supply.
In a free and unregulated market, the best quality and best price occur from billions of consumers making unique choices.
Economics to me is philosophical today. How else can you account for nearly every American putting faith in legal counterfeiting (inflation) and legal bubble-building (artificially low interest rates and artificially high loan acceptance due to FNMA)?
Don't read Mises for junk science, read Mises to better understand those you put in public office.
Re:Cue the libertarian economists (Score:2)
I think you mean psychological. Where the mindset of the people has as much impact on the economy as the underlying fundamentals.
As for "legal counterfeiting" and artificial bubble-building the alternative is "artificial shortages" (deflation), and wider boo
Re:Cue the libertarian economists (Score:2)
I agree. Just as the basics of meteorology are ground in physics, economics also is based on some fundamental rules that have been demonstrated. It's not necessarily the fundamentals are flawed, but the size of the overall system makes it difficult to completely comprehend all variables.
Re:Cue the libertarian economists (Score:2)
No, cartel-like behavior is bad because it allows a small segment of the population to horde money at the expense of the rest of the population. The purpose of money is to provide STABILITY, not GROWTH.
Does that include the cartel-like behavior that the US entered into with Japan that doubled the price of memory chips between 1986 and 1988?
Yes- from a worldwide point of view.
What about the anti-dumping laws that force pr
Re:Cue the libertarian economists (Score:2)
Micron Tech organized the price fixing, then ... (Score:4, Interesting)
I believe the story here is that Micron Technology organized the price fixing ring, then informed the government(s), thereby obtaining immunity.
This is an interesting strategy for handling competition, but dont' fool yourselves that it means lower prices for anyone.
Lew
So what does the fine help? (Score:2)
increased RAM prices to help Rambus out? (Score:3, Interesting)
How much! (Score:4, Interesting)
What I would like to know is how much money it is estimated they made from price fixing. While $300 million is a lot of money I can't help feeling that they made a lot more than that and therefore over all they have still made a profit. Personally, I think these companies should be fined to the point where they are all but bankrupt. After all it's not like they did it by accident. Perhaps makign the directors personally liable would be another route to take. The threat of a couple of year behind bars would probably make them care about shady practices.
Re:How much! (Score:2)
It seems easy enough to find out - just check out their earnings reports for the period of the price fixing.
You'll find that, other than Samsung, which does not break out its memory business from everything else, Hynix, Infineon and Micron all had record or near-record losses.
I guess that without the price fixing the losses would have been worse, but they were pretty large amounts of money...enough that Hynix nearly went
Greasy Wheels of Justice (Score:2)
And when are we going to find out why LCD prices haven't fallen?
Re:Greasy Wheels of Justice (Score:3)
you and i notice things like this but try getting anyone with less than 2 brain cells to notice or even acknowledge.
same thing happened with the intel anti-trust suit. following the announcement, i saw far more AMD machines being advertised in my local sunday newspaper than ever before. before there are 2-3 AMD machines... after the suit, i saw 8-9 AMD computers per ad.
intel is even more guilty than MS yet i see only a small handful o
Re:Greasy Wheels of Justice (Score:2)
Wonderful! (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, can we do something about the other [riaa.com] industry [microsoft.com] cartels [wal-mart.com]?
Re:Wonderful! (Score:2)
they are very big "donors" to the GOP (and the DEMs when they're in "power").
that's how they survived so long... they learned that to be above the law, you have to "buy lots of charity ball tickets".
Jail Time As Well? Infineon Execs Serving Time (Score:2, Informative)
Four Infineon executives were sent to prison (albeit briefly) as part of their plea bargain, also in SF Superior Court.
Re:Jail Time As Well? Infineon Execs Serving Time (Score:2)
Yeah, it's hard- but it's well within payback on profit earned. Still a good business decision to break the law.
Re:Jail Time As Well? Infineon Execs Serving Time (Score:2)
Re:Jail Time As Well? Infineon Execs Serving Time (Score:2)
What does a corporation whose sights are set purely on profit care about conjugal visits for a C-level executive who got caught? He's a write off as far as they are concerned, or at best, he'll serve his six months and come out even richer than when he went in due to "deferred c
Re:Jail Time As Well? Infineon Execs Serving Time (Score:2)
Re:Jail Time As Well? Infineon Execs Serving Time (Score:2)
Clas-action time? (Score:2)
How is the consumer going to see any of this fine money otherwise?
Re:Clas-action time? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Clas-action time? (Score:2)
First of all, Samsung didn't invent DRAM. Second, this isn't a reasonable reward on investment, it's a price fixing scheme. Third, the government doesn't have to allow you to create a company or use THEIR money at all, they do so for the purpose of having a STABLE economy, not a SUCCESSFUL one.
In the end, it depends on why you think we bother with having an economy to begin with. From the point of view of the government, it's because
Re:Clas-action time? (Score:2, Interesting)
Profits are never unreasonable. And consumers have no right to be sold a specific product. Each and every sale is an agreement between the buyer and the seller. If the consumer does not want a good at a price, they won't buy it. Monopolies have never existed to the point at which people whine about them. Oil is exp
So who thinks? (Score:3, Funny)
Buy those Nanos while Apple is still getting a good deal on memory. :-)
Yay!!! (Score:2)
I'm more concerned about energy price-fixing (Score:2)
Senator Cantwell's letter to President Bush [senate.gov] asking for more transparency in the oil market, and an explanation for why oil company profits are so high right now.
Great So.. (Score:2)
Cool.... (Score:2)
that fine is a pittance for them. (Score:4, Informative)
2004 revenue was just under $122 BILLION, with net income of $11.8 BILLION.
So the fine is 2.5% of one year's net income, 0.25% of one year's revenue, and a mere 0.14% of their total assets.
This is incentive against cheating in future? How??
Re:Maybe someone can answer this for me. (Score:2, Interesting)
Big joke, right? This never happens in real life, right? I live in Califorina, and during the Enron era THIS IS WHAT HAPPENED to energy prices. Although there was no single big meeting to plan it out, all the energy mark