AMD and Intel have had their differences. And by differences, we mean Intel engaging in anti-competitive actions that they’ve been found guilty of in the European Union.

But all of this was supposed to come to a close last month, when AMD and Intel buried the hatchet and made up for past offenses. In return for some cash, some good behavior out of Intel, and for Intel to stop trying to block the Global Foundries deal, AMD would drop all of their civil and regulatory complaints against Intel. And that would be the end of Intel’s legal problems with various governments, right? No, as it turns out that’s wrong.

The catalyst for Intel’s legal woes (besides their own actions, obviously) has been AMD complaining to various regulatory boards about anti-competitive actions undertaken by Intel. Based on those complaints, the European Commission, the South Korean FTC, and the American FTC have been investigating Intel for some time now over these alleged actions. Intel has been found guilty and fined in the EU and South Korea (with both cases on appeal) while the American FTC has continued to investigate.

In fact despite the FTC just now suing Intel, this is actually about half-way through the process. The FTC investigation is done, and they have been negotiating with Intel in private for quite some time to get the matter settled. A lawsuit is the next step for the FTC, when those negotiations break down. Those negotiations have in fact broken down, so here we are: the FTC has sued Intel, and the biggest court battle ever for Intel is soon to begin.

What the FTC Accuses Intel of Doing in the CPU Market

As the FTC’s investigation into the matter is already over, they have published a complete list of complaints against Intel which will be the basis of the coming trial. Based on these complaints the FTC case is a significant departure from the EU and South Korean cases, as the FTC is accusing Intel over not only anti-AMD shenanigans early this decade, but of continuing anti-AMD and anti-NVIDIA shenanigans right up to this day.


The Athlon, the processor that's at the root of all of Intel's legal troubles

The case fundamentally breaks down into two halves: what Intel did against AMD in the CPU market, and what they’re continuing to do against AMD and NVIDIA in the GPU market. Let’s start with the CPU-focused complaints:

  1. The usual complaints we’ve seen from the EU. Intel rewarded OEMs to not use AMD’s processors through various means, such as volume discounts, withholding advertising & R&D money, and threatening OEMs with a low-priority during CPU shortages.
  2. Intel reworked their compiler to put AMD CPUs at a disadvantage. For a time Intel’s compiler would not enable SSE/SSE2 codepaths on non-Intel CPUs, our assumption is that this the specific complaint. To our knowledge this has been resolved for quite some time now.
  3. Intel paid/coerced software and hardware vendors to not support or to limit their support for AMD CPUs. This includes having vendors label their wares as Intel compatible, but not AMD compatible.
  4. False advertising. This includes hiding the compiler changes from developers, misrepresenting benchmark results (such as BAPCo Sysmark) that changed due to those compiler changes, and general misrepresentation of benchmarks as being “real world” when they are not.

Interestingly enough, the FTC cites Intel’s reasoning for all of this being that the company was at a competitive disadvantage, and engaged in these actions to buy time to improve their products. The timelines given place specific emphasis on the Athlon (K7) launch in 1999, and the Athlon 64 (K8) launch in 2003. This is a somewhat different take than in past cases, where Intel was merely accused of attempting to keep AMD’s overall market share down rather than specifically bridging performance gaps.

The FTC believes that the effects of all of these actions have (besides limiting AMD): served to drive up CPU prices, driven up CPU distribution costs, limited CPU innovation, harmed AMD’s ability to market CPUs, limited the ability of OEMs to innovate and differentiate their products, and reduced the quality of industry benchmarking.

Ultimately all of the CPU accusations are for things long past; none of the FTC’s CPU-related allegations are for things that have occurred in the last few years. We would not take this as a sign that the FTC is happy with the current market situation, but that they have no proof that they wish to follow up on that would show Intel as having engaged in anti-competitive actions in the CPU market in the last few years. The FTC does want some significant changes at Intel, which we’ll discuss in a bit.

Finally, there’s also the matter of AMD. Since AMD and Intel have settled their matters, AMD is presumably not going to participate in these proceedings as an ally of the FTC. As the FTC is going ahead on these charges, it’s clear that they aren’t worried about what this means for their position.

What the FTC Accuses Intel of Doing in the GPU Market

When we were first reading the FTC’s suit, the thing that caught us entirely off-guard was that it wasn’t merely about anti-competitive actions in the CPU market, but anti-competitive actions in the GPU market as well. While the CPU-related accusations are all for things done well in the past, the GPU accusations are fresh, very fresh. These run right up to today, and include the Larrabee project and the anti-competitive actions Intel has taken in the GPU market both outside and inside that project. To get right to the point, the FTC believes that as things currently stand, Intel is likely to get a monopoly on the GPU market similar to the one that they have on the CPU market, and that this monopoly will be created by abusing their CPU monopoly.

In the complaints about the GPU market, both NVIDIA and AMD are mentioned as being the primary competitors for Intel. The bulk of the complaints however are related to NVIDIA and their chipset business, as while AMD stands to be harmed too by an Intel GPU monopoly, it’s NVIDIA that stands to be the most harmed. In effect Intel has finally gotten AMD off their back for CPU matters, only to now have NVIDIA on their back for GPU matters.


The GeForce 9400M: Intel's chief competitor in the integrated graphics market and a threatened product line

Just to note where things stand, the FTC already estimates that Intel has approximately 50% of the GPU market. This is consistent with the vast number of Intel IGP-equipped computers that are on the market. Depending on how you intend to count various user bases, this stands to grow in the future as Intel puts their IGP GPUs first on-chip, and then on-die with their CPUs.

The basis of the FTC’s complaint here is that they believe Intel is threatened by the rise of GPUs as programmable computing devices, and that using them in GPGPU situations threatens Intel by making CPUs less important (something NVIDIA has been trying to play for ages) and as a result less profitable. The FTC argues that Intel is seeking to establish a monopoly here to maintain their overall control of (and high margins in) the computing market.

As for the specific complaints:

  1. Intel eliminated the future threat of NVIDIA’s chipset business by refusing to license the latest version of the DMI bus (the bus that connects the Northbridge to the Southbridge) and the QPI bus (the bus that connects Nehalem processors to the X58 Northbridge) to NVIDIA, which prevents them from offering a chipset for Nehalem-generation CPUs.
  2. Intel “created several interoperability problems” with discrete CPUs, specifically to attack GPGPU functionality. We’re actually not sure what this means, it may be a complaint based on the fact that Lynnfield only offers single PCIe x16 connection coming from the CPU, which wouldn’t be enough to fully feed 2 high-end GPUs.
  3. Intel has attempted to harm GPGPU functionality by developing Larrabee. This includes lying about the state of Larrabee hardware and software, and making disparaging remarks about non-Intel development tools.
  4. In bundling CPUs with IGP chipsets, Intel is selling them at below-cost to drive out competition (given Intel’s margins, we find this one questionable. Below-cost would have to be extremely cheap).
  5. Intel priced Atom CPUs higher if they were not used with an Intel IGP chipset.
  6. All of this has enhanced Intel’s CPU monopoly.

The FTC believes that all of this will help Intel to establish a GPU monopoly. This is on top of all other effects of Intel’s actions, which are similar to the effects of their actions in the CPU market: driving up GPU prices, driving up GPU distribution costs, limited OEM differentiation, and limited GPU innovation.

There’s also one last complaint unrelated to GPUs, which has to do with standards.

  1. Intel used their market position to delay AMD and NVIDIA’s implementations of USB and HDCP by refusing to make the specifications accessible until Intel’s products were ready. We know that there has been some strife among Intel and virtually everyone else over Intel dragging its heels on the USB3 specification, but it’s not clear if this complaint is about that.
Intel's Response & What The FTC Wants
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  • - Thursday, December 17, 2009 - link

    I didn't say it was illegal. Intel can set it's prices to whatever it wants. Some previous posters seem to be saying there's nothing wrong with an Intel monopoly as long as they continue to make good products for a good price. They won't, and that's the point I was making.

    Current AMD CPU's ARE competitive from a price performance perspective. AMD makes very low margins and Intel makes huge margins, and at many price segments AMD actually has the better deal, yet Intel still dominates the market.

    It's not because consumers don't want AMD. Most consumers really don't care what CPU is in their system. It's that most OEM systems have Intel CPUs, so unless a consumer specifically looks for an AMD system, he'll most likely end up with Intel.
  • brucelee816 - Thursday, December 17, 2009 - link

    I think this whole crackdown could lead to the FTC looking into the practices of Nvidia and Ati/AMD. Again and again, ATI cards have extremely good specifications, but when it came to performance benchmarks, there was no gap. I've always suspected that Nvidia was doing something funny to the the software community to support Nvidia more than ATI products. Any rebuttal?
  • check - Thursday, December 17, 2009 - link

    3. To stop prioritizing CPU shipments to loyal OEMs.
    That is how business works. You build a relationship with your clients and the ones that have been loyal and treated you well in the past you return the favor.

    5. For Intel to be disallowed from producing/distributing any software or hardware that unreasonably excludes or inhibits the performance of competitors’ GPUs and CPUs.
    You are going to disallow Intel from distributing hardware and software because it isn't compatible with their competitors? I would like the FTC to investigate Apple's xcode software suite because I can't program my iPhone on my windows/linux/(non-intel-basedapple) based computer system.

    6. To stop selling things below cost. The FTC is defining this as being the average variable cost plus a “contribution to Intel’s fixed sunk costs in an appropriate multiple of that average variable cost.”
    The point of these sorts of investigations are to protect the customers. How is the FTC fixing prices and making the market uncompetitive helping out the customer?

    7. For Intel to do a few different things about the versions of their compiler that put AMD at a disadvantage (which the FTC is calling the Defective Compiler): offer a substitute compiler to customers for free that is not a Defective Compiler, or to compensate customers in switching to another compiler, to provide notice to software buyers of products compiled using the Defective Compiler that they may need to replace their software.
    You don't like the software, don't use it. This compiler wasn't intended to support the AMD platform fully.

    8. To stop Intel from making misleading statements.
    You find me a salesman that doesn't do that when he is trying to convince you to buy his product over a competitors

    10. For Intel to license the QPI and DMI buses to 3rd party chipset manufacturers.
    Intel owns it, why are they obligated to license it to the competition?

    12. For Intel to stop badmouthing competing products unless they have solid scientific evidence.
    Why are Verizon and AT&T allowed to mother-fuck each other left and right?

    13. For Intel to foot the bill for the independent organization that will monitor this.
    No conflict of interest there... so a company that has been essentially bribing people will now be paying the organization that will be monitoring them?

    Now, I'm not saying that Intel is in the right here (far from it) but we have to remember that the people working for the FTC are just as big of assholes (if not bigger) and have limited technical knowledge on the topic to begin with. Forcing a company license a technology that they have patented? Come on, that is bullshit and even the FTC knows this.
  • mrd0 - Friday, December 18, 2009 - link

    Oh Check...you would be the perfect jury member for Intel. No clue about dominant firm anti-trust law.

    And you can be forced to license your patents...just see Image Technical Services, Inc. v. Eastman Kodak Co., 125 F.3d 1195 (9th Cir. 1997) for one example. That's a twelve year old case...nothing new here.
  • thebeastie - Thursday, December 17, 2009 - link

    You just don't get it do you? It isn't really about specifics if you ask me it is about the overall prickiness of Intels behaviour and about what is more just, that's why they are called "Federal Trade Commission" not the "Federal Square Commission".

    Maybe you would understand what is really all about if they called it the "Federal Fair Commission".

    They know Intel has always been in a very unique position and has always been way over the top taken advantage of this position.

    No they aren't going to care that people like you hold stock, they might hope you have a little intuition to maybe sell out of your Intel stock if every dollar counts, but that's it.

    So the Federal Trade Commission are going to do what they do and that is smack Intel hard for being pricks even if it doesn't fit in your PATHETIC SQUARE view of the world. The world doesn't always revolve around how square things are, sometimes it just is done because, and no amount of square whining is going to turn it around.

    Intel has always been in a very unique business position to just about any other company in the world and they have always fully exploited it in every means possible especially via laws and smart lawyers that wouldn't normally been in such good position to protect their products over the many decades due to the unique nature of CPUs.
  • bh192012 - Thursday, December 17, 2009 - link

    If Intel is guilty of manipulating their monopoly for illegal gains in other markets, the corrective action should be to void their monopolies (current patents) so that the market can, self correct. Intel would survive and could continue to make new patents.

  • ash9 - Thursday, December 17, 2009 - link

    Check, you're embarrassing yourself
    asH
  • IKeelU - Thursday, December 17, 2009 - link

    Well you sure showed him (?)
  • - Thursday, December 17, 2009 - link

    it was clear enough for you, 'need me to connect the dots too?
    asH
  • pjs - Thursday, December 17, 2009 - link

    So they just decided to pay AMD over a billion U.S. dollars just to be nice.

    Yup, that's it.

    I wish they would be nice to me as well.

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