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AMD China Hardware

AMD Cites 'Factual Errors', 'Omissions' in Critical Report on Its China Venture (forbes.com) 69

Thursday the Wall Street Journal wrote a piece about AMD's joint venture with Chinese holding coming THATIC -- titled "How a Big U.S. Chip Maker Gave China the 'Keys to the Kingdom'." The article argues that AMD "essentially granted China access to advanced processor IP that could be used to threaten U.S. national security," reports Forbes.

But they add that the same day, AMD executive Harry Wolin wrote an angry blog post in response, complaining that the story "contains several factual errors and omissions and does not portray an accurate picture." Forbes reports: From Wolin's post, "Starting in 2015, AMD diligently and proactively briefed the Department of Defense, the Department of Commerce and multiple other agencies within the U.S. Government before entering into the joint ventures. AMD received no objections whatsoever from any agency to the formation of the joint ventures or to the transfer of technology -- technology which was of lower performance than other commercially available processors. In fact, prior to the formation of the joint ventures and the transfer of technology, the Department of Commerce notified AMD that the technology proposed was not restricted or otherwise prohibited from being transferred. Given this clear feedback, AMD moved ahead with the joint ventures."

Not only does AMD claim it had the green light from multiple government entities to enter into the deal, the post claims that the WSJ article is simply wrong. "The Wall Street Journal story omits important factual details, including the fact that AMD put significant protections in place to protect its intellectual property (IP) and prevent valuable IP from being misused or reverse engineered to develop future generations of processors."

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AMD Cites 'Factual Errors', 'Omissions' in Critical Report on Its China Venture

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    "Starting in 2015, AMD diligently and proactively briefed the Department of Defense, the Department of Commerce and multiple other agencies within the U.S. Government before entering into the joint ventures. AMD received no objections whatsoever from any agency to the formation of the joint ventures or to the transfer of technology"

    This sounds quite consistent with other information about the Obama administration's approach to China and IP.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 29, 2019 @07:56PM (#58847720)

    And buying lots of ads in places they usually don't buy. Same old Intel shenanigans, when they can't win on tech they send out the lawyers and marketeers with the monopoly money.

  • by JoeyRox ( 2711699 ) on Saturday June 29, 2019 @08:00PM (#58847728)
    First it was the heavily-government sourced Bloomberg Article about tiny spy chips in motherboards [bloomberg.com]. Then it was how Huawei's 5G network infrastructure gear is a grave Chinese military security threat to countries, even though our intelligence agencies provided so little evidence that the UK basically ignored us and decided to go ahead with Huawei for their 5G networks anyway (in spite of UK's assessment of legitimate issues with Huawei's software being poorly designed). And now we have this article about how AMD is in bed with China, which magically coincides with Intel having their ass handed to them by AMD in the market.

    Free-market capitalism is an amazing thing. Too bad we're not giving it a chance.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Fact is, AMD has been extremely secretive about what exactly was and wasn't transferred, and what restrictions if any, apply, and how those restrictions are enforced. They can't fault us for not believing their side of the story if they refuse to tell us their side of the story.

    So you say "AMD put significant protections in place to protect its intellectual property (IP) and prevent valuable IP from being misused or reverse engineered to develop future generations of processors"

    So what are those significan

    • Fact is, AMD has been extremely secretive about what exactly was and wasn't transferred, and what restrictions if any, apply, and how those restrictions are enforced. They can't fault us for not believing their side of the story if they refuse to tell us their side of the story.

      Businesses are extremely secretive about what exactly was and wasn't transferred to any partner in any industry at any time.

      That's like pointing at their feet and complaining that socks are suspicious.

      You admit to having beliefs even when you don't have data. In fact, you take it a step further and point at your own lack of data as the source of your beliefs. You're like, the ultimate ignoramus.

  • ...none of which he identifies.

    Also, "AMDâ(TM)s belief is that it did everything correctly". Belief? There is no belief. There is broke the law, or did not.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 29, 2019 @09:09PM (#58847912)

      No, that isn't how law works. You try to do your best and if the government agrees in court, then great. If they agree and then change their mind, that is a question of the courts. If you read all the laws and interpret them the best you know how, that is also a question for the courts. When it comes to federal regulations in business, you are guilty until proven otherwise.

      • by Agripa ( 139780 )

        If it works like the BATFE or IRS, then following advice given by the government which turns out to be wrong is not a defense in court.

    • by kick6 ( 1081615 )

      Also, "AMDâ(TM)s belief is that it did everything correctly". Belief? There is no belief. There is broke the law, or did not.

      The law isn't a BASIC computer program. It is absolutely NEVER that simple.

    • ...none of which he identifies.

      Also, "AMDâ(TM)s belief is that it did everything correctly". Belief? There is no belief. There is broke the law, or did not.

      If a basic word like "belief" causes you such grief, how could you possibly hope to understand something like this where everything is narrowly parsed?

  • by reanjr ( 588767 ) on Saturday June 29, 2019 @09:55PM (#58848034) Homepage

    Someone must be shorting AMD.

    • Hope so. I'd like to buy some more.

    • More like Intel is up to its old games.

      Soon they will contribute "cripple AMD" code into GCC and other open source compilers (because their compiler is no longer relevant), and they will illegally pay retailers to not sell AMD chips.

      Before anyone goes there, each of these things Intel has already been found guilty of in a court of law, either here in America or across the pond in the EU, and it happened to be when AMD was killing them on single core performance, had real dual cores, and were absolutely
      • by Anonymous Coward

        "when they were gaming benchmarks"

        You're saying it like they have stopped..? "Benchmarks" are completely useless, unless they are your own. Commercially or "freely" available are ridiculously doctored. Just look at the differences between different versions, and you'll see how tests which favours AMD just.. vanish, while tests which favour Intel gets repeated through the suite, over and over again, and are given undue weight on top of it in the summary. One pretty obvious example would be how compression be

        • Commercially or "freely" available are ridiculously doctored. Just look at the differences between different versions, and you'll see how tests which favours AMD just.. vanish, while tests which favour Intel gets repeated through the suite, over and over again, and are given undue weight on top of it in the summary.

          Except for Cinebench, weirdly. It's been showing results favorable to AMD since Zen was released, but still hasn't been "adjusted". Maybe its author is independently wealthy...

      • by Agripa ( 139780 )

        Before anyone goes there, each of these things Intel has already been found guilty of in a court of law, either here in America or across the pond in the EU, and it happened to be when AMD was killing them on single core performance, had real dual cores, and were absolutely crushing Intel on 64-bit.

        Intel was only found guilty in the 1991 lawsuit from AMD. The 2005 lawsuit you are referring to eventually resulted in a settlement.

  • 1. AMD could have done everything legally by the book, crossed the ts and dotted the is, and did everything in its power to protect its IP. And:

    2. China could have still stolen all the IP it needs because the chips were fabed in China and there's always ways to steal IP [battleswarmblog.com], even if it means stealing each variable in each machine in each process step, each mask, etc.

    Building anything in China is basically asking that your technology be ripped off.

    • About 2:
      Duplicating the masks and processing steps does not mean understanding the technology in detail. But then again, perhaps the idea is not to pirate chips for immediate sale in the market, but to have a domestic production capacity in case of sudden new sanctions.

      If I was in place of the Chinese I would seriously consider that, even if it only gave me the current generation of chips. It would mean a reprieve of a few years if the USA suddenly try to cut off China from modern CPU technology, before sai

      • If I was in place of the Chinese I would seriously consider that, even if it only gave me the current generation of chips. It would mean a reprieve of a few years if the USA suddenly try to cut off China from modern CPU technology, before said chip generation is hopelessly obsolete.

        This whole story is about chips that are already obsolete, but still useful for many applications.

        The original story is just vapid bullshit. The only new thing that happened to result in a story is that the joint venture was placed on the "entities list" and AMD had to cut off their own joint venture. Which they have done. There is nothing else "new" here to be "news," the technology was already generally available when it was transferred in 2015.

  • let's see...

    [China's American Arsenal — Steemit](https://steemit.com/china/@corbettreport/china-s-american-arsenal)

  • Piece of Advice, AMD? Move your headquarters to China and spit in US dishes, they deserve it.

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