Intel's president Paul Otellini has rubbished the evidence presented by the EU about alleged anti-competitive practices by his company.
This week the EU released documents which it says shows computer manufacturers held off from using AMD processors under pressure or following incentives from Intel. But Otellini denied categorically that this was the case.
“No, that's not the case,” he said when questioned on the issue.
“We don't do exclusive deals and when our time comes we will show that. The EU can release evidence early, something we cannot do.”
The EU says that it has letters from companies such as Dell, HP and Lenovo that show the companies were either induced to use Intel technology by volume discounts or held off on swithcing to AMD technology for fear of reprisals.
Dell said that it feared any retaliation from Intel if it switched to AMD chips “could be severe and prolonged with impact to all LOBs [Lines of Business]”.
“There is nothing new in yesterday's revelations,” Otellini said.
The EU has consistently ignored information and we have customers who are willing to state that that was wrong.”
Otellini hits back at EU antitrust evidence
By
Iain Thomson
on Sep 23, 2009 8:56AM
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Partner Content
Beyond the box: How Crayon Is Redefining Distribution for the Next Era
How mandatory climate reporting is raising the bar for corporate leadership
Shared Intelligence is the Real Competitive Edge Partners Enjoy with Crayon
Promoted Content
Why Renew IT Is Different: Where Science, AI and Sustainability Redefine IT Asset Disposition
MSPs with a robust data protection strategy will achieve market success




