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Intel threatening to revoke AMD's x86 license

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    #16
    Yesterday in an interview with Betanews, Intel corporate spokesperson Chuck Mulloy requested that AMD lift its veil of secrecy regarding the redacted portion of a cross-licensing agreement between the two companies. The unseen portion, we're told and Mulloy believes, includes the list of technologies that AMD is currently licensing to Intel -- Mulloy himself has not seen that list.

    It's the list of technologies whose licenses AMD is threatening to cancel if Intel goes through with its plan to cancel its part of the cross-licensing agreement.

    This morning, AMD spokesperson Michael Silverman told Betanews that his company would be willing to agree to Intel's request, on one condition. It's a big condition.

    "We would be willing to make the full details of the cross-license agreement public," said Silverman, "if Intel would in turn allow the outside world to see the evidence of its illegal business practices, which it has so far hidden behind the protective order in the US civil antitrust litigation." Intel is claiming AMD has breached that agreement by granting spinoff company Global Foundries the rights and means to produce x86 CPUs using Intel's intellectual property. Intel has stated the agreement can only be cancelled in the event of a breach, and believes AMD cannot simply cancel its side simply to retaliate against Intel.

    In multiple US courts, Intel has maintained that ongoing and concluded investigations against it, having been conducted in Europe and Korea, have no bearing on the company's conduct in the US. However, Intel has been somewhat successful of late in getting judges to agree with that assessment. Last year, for instance, AMD sought evidence from what Intel was preparing to turn over to the European Commission, in conjunction with the antitrust case there first brought against it by Intergraph. The US Supreme Court ruled that AMD may have the right to pursue this information, but only if a lower court reviewed its request and said yes.

    A lower court reviewed its request, and said no. Last October, US District Judge James Ware ruled that AMD's request was "unduly intrusive and burdensome," adding that since the EC had decided some of the information it had received wasn't relevant to its own case, it probably wasn't relevant to any other case either.

    AMD's Silverman pointed us to the Korean FTC's decision last June to impose fines upon Intel for anti-competitive behavior. Though the facts of that case are officially public, English-language translations of the decision only began appearing last January. Still, those translations are available to the outside world; what Intel's attorneys have managed to accomplish thus far is to maintain barriers between findings against it in foreign countries, and cases against it in the US.

    http://www.betanews.com/article/AMD-...ill/1237302351


    Dirty laundry to possibly be exposed ???
    Oh if a man tried to take his time on Earth and prove before he died what one man's life could be worth, well I wonder what would happen to this world ? - Harry Chapin

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      #17
      Originally posted by WalkinTarget View Post
      Intel owns the right of x86. But AMD owns the rights for 64-bit CPU's. So that means... if both pull out.... AMD won't make CPU's other than true 64-bit CPU's and Intel will return back to the 32 bit processors.
      WT what are you basing this on? No one owns the rights to 64bit or 32bit processors. What they own is a specific 32bit or 64bit instruction set. After all Sun has been making 64bit procs for decades now.

      If Intel revokes the right to use x86 instruction set I don't see it as a completely bad thing. For gods sake kill it already please.

      Also Intel won't go back to making 32bit procs only. The main thing AMD did if I remember rightly was create the Opteron which are 64bit procs that could do x86 32bit instructions without a performance hit. The first procs to be able to do that. Intel would have to increase development (if they haven't) already in order to do the same or just abandon the x86 instruction set in it's entirety. Most OS's nowadays have both IA64 and and AMD64 bit variants. At least Linux, FreeBSD and Windows (I'm not sure about OSX). So the way I see it it's just a strategic move to thump AMD.

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        #18
        I heard the other day that Intel is ramping up IA64 again. Think they are preparing for the possibility of losing the AMD64 license?
        [url=http://www.enjin.com/bf3-signature-generator][img]http://sigs.enjin.com/sig-bf3/1fad512dc784c11c.png[/img][/url]

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