NVidia, AMD Subpoenaed In Antitrust Investigation 132
mustardayonnaise writes "CNN Money is reporting that graphics chipmakers Nvidia and AMD (who recently acquired NVidia rival ATI) said Friday that they received subpoenas from the US Department of Justice as part of a probe into potential antitrust violations involving graphics processing units and cards. Each company controls about 25% of the entire graphics chip market. According to the article, Intel, who makes their own fair share of graphics chipsets, has yet to be included in the investigation."
by that token (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:by that token (Score:4, Informative)
Re:by that token (Score:4, Interesting)
This is "gov't vs. business," not "business vs business" like the current AMD and Intel case.
iNTEL claims lack of jurisdiction? (Score:1)
Also investigate MS XBox / FOSS driver issues (Score:4, Interesting)
With the top two graphics chip companies controlling the majority of the market, this could have happened. Perhaps the "patented code" in the drivers that prevents them from opening the source is Microsoft-owned?
I know that it will never happen, but it would be nice to bring it up just in case someone is listening.
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Or maybe it's just as you say and those are the top two graphics companies and MS wanted the best.
It's like the "Never ascribe to malice, that which can be explained by incompetence" corallary to Occam's razor except more like "never ascribe to malice, that which can be explained by good business
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Right, because the motivation couldn't have been wanting to get a top-notch GPU at an affordable price from a company that knows how to build GPUs successfully. Nope, it was just one more salvo in Microsoft's covert war against FOSS.
I'm sure the switch to ATI chips in the 360 from nVidia chi
Re:Also investigate MS XBox / FOSS driver issues (Score:4, Funny)
I'm probably one of the bigger tin-foil-hat-wearers around here when it comes to Microsoft, and not even I would believe something like that. You're just flat-out crazy, buddy.
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Intel Correction (Score:5, Funny)
From TFA: "To my knowledge, we haven't gotten a subpoena ourselves ... but I'm not 100 percent certain," said Intel spokesman Chuck Mulloy, adding he was checking with company lawyers to confirm.
You know, as an investor, I'd rather go with the company that has been subpoened over the one that can't quite be sure!
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Your comparison is crap. He's the spokesman for the company... he should be the second guy to know about these things.
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Re:Intel Correction (Score:5, Funny)
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priorities? WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)
Meanwhile, the RIAA, who has a stranglehold over the music industry, gets to drive their truckloads of money straight to the bank.
Re:priorities? WTF? (Score:4, Insightful)
Honestly, it's a very good point, why are two agressively competative companies, having half the market share being examined for antitrust, while the RIAA fatcats, who are obviously a TRUSTworthy consortium not?
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Re:priorities? WTF? (Score:4, Insightful)
Antitrust issues come in when the consumer is getting screwed. in the case of video cards you may only have 2 major options, however they are constantly trying to out innovate the other in order to gain some market share (and not fall behind) defiantly a good situation for the consumer.
there are many monopolies in industries, however if the consumer isnt being adversely affected then the issue isnt raised near as much
WTF? (Score:3, Insightful)
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If you are speaking of the graphics chips themselves, there is obviously competition. Both companies are enduring and adapting to a visciously short product revision cycle, where every couple months both companies release revamped versions of their graphics chips. This has had an inc
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Ok, there's not many of them over here in SC, but last I checked Kroger was a grocery store. I don't know about you but I'd prefer to buy my graphics cards and my produce from different locations.
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There exist still a few older Fred Meyers stores that have only the grocery, clothing and electronics sections. The reason I shop at Fred Meyers is because I once worked for them. I have a strong preference to sh
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Both companies are enduring and adapting to a visciously short product revision cycle, where every couple months both companies release revamped versions of their graphics chips. This has had an incredibly positive effect on the market for software utilizing ever-more complex 3D graphics, as well as keeping the graphics card manufacturers afloat.
My point exactly, neither company is competing with the other, they are both releasing nearly the same chips(performance wise) and nearly the same rate. If the car market worked the same way, you'd see the same amount of ford/gm/toyota cars on the road.
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They're not subjected to the same laws as companies.
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the labels tell the RIAA what to do, not the other way around.
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They're not subjected to the same laws as companies.
Re:priorities? WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)
In the oligopoly of the music industry, the RIAA is the cartel that allows the major players to exert monopoly control on the market.
The fact that the RIAA itself is not a company should not be sufficient to protect its existance and protect its members from antitrust prosecutions.
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Comparisons to RIAA is silly ... (Score:2)
Meanwhile, the RIAA, who has a stranglehold over the music industry, gets to drive their truckloads of money straight to the bank.
To make a video chipset y
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Interesting... (Score:2)
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http://www.hexus.net/content/item.php?item=5648 [hexus.net]
OMG They are the only two companies... (Score:4, Funny)
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wait, the government wants to make 3D cards?
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But these kind of situations are most likely built on patents (licensing, trading, whatever) as a means to lock out competitors. This is obviously not what the patent system is supposed to be used for.
I'm certain there are a multitude of patents related to the implementation of OpenGL, for example. It would be my guess that the costs for implementing cards that would otherwise violate these patents would cost more than they could sell
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To the US government, it's more a case of: look, there are two companies making billions of dollars, and they hardly contribute anything to lobbying or campaigns! It must be a case worthy of an anti-trust suit!
Seriously, consider Microsoft's political contributions before and after they started being hit with anti-trust suits. It sure looks to me like their practices being officially approved was based more on contributions than on any actual cha
Glad the DOJ has their priorities straight (Score:5, Insightful)
Good job, DOJ!
Re:Glad the DOJ has their priorities straight (Score:5, Interesting)
Frankly I'm not going to assume anything. Yeah, the graphics card market is competitive and NVidia and ATI have done a very nice job of leapfrogging each other over and over into the stratospheres of graphics performance, and I hope that doesn't change. However if they are using illegal business tactics to ensure it doesn't become a 3-way race, then that has to stop. Kinda like when Rambus (*spits*) turned around and sued the Dramurai, who it turned out were colluding to control prices and lock out Rambus (*spits*).
Of course I'd rather they spent their time worrying about all the other things, but I'm sure it's not an either-or proposition, and again we're operating under a dearth of facts. Though I'll admit that unlike anti-trust action against Microsoft and Intel, I'm not already aware of shady business practices on the part of these two companies that would warrant it.
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Has it occured to anybody yet that the DOJ might be preparing to go after Intel, and they've subpoenaed AMD and Nvidia as the other two CPU-makers? If AMD + Nvidia have 25% of the GPU market and intel the other 75%, then it seems to me that AMD and NVidia have information that would be needed in an investigation of Intel. So whether or not it's about CPU or GPU, it could easily be about Intel. (Don't forget NVidia makes CPUs too)
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I would be more suspicious of them using illegal business tactics to inflate prices, rather than to obstruct a 3rd party. Have you checked prices on high end 3D cards lately? Plus, there are no viable competitors in the consumer 3D arena right now, at least not from a performance standpoint.
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That's the problem. That's terribly unlikely unless there is some kind of collusion going on.
But your logic of MS="evil" monopoly and AMD+Nvidia="good" monopoly... well, I guess there is no logic.
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You do realize that with two companies controlling the market, it's called a "duopoly," correct?
I believe that the parent isn't saying that the fact they're basically a duopoly isn't bad, but what they're trying to do to rid of their competitor via 'bending' the laws is bad.
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Huh? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why are they going after these guys anyway?
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Why are they going after these guys anyway?
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ATI & Nvidia having similar marketshare does not equal "real competition". The fact that it's not one company with 99% of the market does not mean that it's some kind of utopia.
vertical monopoly? (Score:1)
There's a timing problem there, but since one would assume a corrupt corporation trying engaging in court warfare as a defense against that other suit, one can't be sure that the timing problem is not being ignored.
(And, yes, I do suspect iNTEL of doing exactly what AMD says they do in that other suit, which is why I won't by iNTEL's CPUs, and why I'm not buying Macs any more. I do put my money where my mouth is.)
Well, it's a pretty crooked market (Score:5, Informative)
So, the sales people went to various board manufacturers, and said "Do you want to buy our chip". The board manufacturers said Gosh. That's perfect for our mid-range market. We'd love to. Our sales people went home happy. nVidia's sales people said "Do you want us to keep selling you our chips?" The board manufacturers sid "Yes, of course we do". nVidia said "well, don't buy chips from that other upstart company".
Apart from the huge board manufacturers who would be able to seriously dent nVidia's sales, none of them were interested in us any more.
Re:Well, it's a pretty crooked market (Score:4, Interesting)
Frankly, as a consumer, I wouldn't buy a graphics card from an upstart (or a board that has built in graphics from an upstart). It's a chicken-egg problem.
Many folks got stuck with 3d hardware cards and no company and/or no supported drivers... with Nvidia (dunno about ATI), you can take their TNT2 card and still get it to work with their -current- drivers (even on Linux!). Had it been some unknown-brand card, you might not even get X to come up (and have to use Windows in VGA mode).
So yeah... competition sucks. What a small corp can do is compete on openness. Sure, I'd buy some unknown brand if it follows some open standard, has open source drivers, and works with Linux out of the box. In fact, that's the only way I see how a small corp can get ahead in this business.
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Well, *you* might not, but someone else might. However, that someone else didn't have the opportunity to do so (that is, if the story is true).
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I'm using Linux and FreeBSD. Nvidia's out-of-date crippleware drivers don't count as "supported". The non-existant ATI drivers even less so.
I don't agree with this anti-trust move, but that doesn't mean I think NVidia/AMD are above criticism.
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You may want to take a look at Nvidia's list of currently supported cards. [nvidia.com] Let me know if you see the TNT2 on there. In fact, this Gentoo Nvidia guide [gentoo.org] clearly shows the TNT2 in their "list of unsupported legacy video cards."
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Re:Mod Parent Informative (Score:4, Interesting)
I didn't RTFA, I'm more interested to hear the chain of events that got the DOJ started on this particular issue. As I recall, it was intense lobbying in DC by Microsoft's competitors that finally got them into trouble.
Which competitor(s) got the DOJ started on this one? Microsoft? Intel? ?
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"If you want to continue selling Windows machines, youll forget about this little BeOS thing"
You'll have to forgive me (Score:2)
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I mean the board's brand name is nothing, so they probably could outsource the board building and packaging to some random chinese company bypassing nVidia's radar.
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Not sure. Might have been the corporate policy of not competing with our customers. If it was our only product we would have had to do this. But this was just the graphics division of a huge larger company. If they wanted to, they could have given the chips away and competed in the same underhand way as nVidia. But they didn't want to.
Or pair-up with a smaller board manufacturer company that did not buy from nVidia.
You'd be surprised just
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That said, it would be nice to have a more diverse market... bu
straight out of MS playbook (Score:2)
Plenty of examples like this were heard in the antitrust case against MS. You can bet they're doin
PowerVR (Score:2)
Overrated (Score:2)
Those were the primary reasons i avoided their Kyro line of graphics cards for the pc. The performance was lacking overall when you put hardware lighting into consideration.
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Well... (Score:1)
And a good reason not to insist on cutting edge (Score:1)
Use non-leader products for your routers, NAS, lightweight servers, etc. Maybe even use non-x86 CPUs.
What are they wasting our tax dollars on now? (Score:3, Insightful)
Any word on why this is happening or are we just funding some Justice Dept's employee's rise to celebrity?
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My friend you probably haven't worked at the right level of the "business" side of the tech industry then.
You definitely haven't worked in the Taiwan OEM/ODM business either. What happens there would make Microsoft look like Mother Theresa. (sp?)
Ahh (Score:1)
What does it feel like (Score:2, Funny)
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Market Power (Score:2)
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