Intel to fight EU antitrust charges next week
By David Lawsky
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Chipmaker Intel Corp will fight European Commission charges that it abused its dominance and gave illegal rebates to drive a smaller competitor from the market at a two-day closed hearing next week.
Intel has its logo on four-fifths of the central processing units that run the world's 1 billion personal computers and servers, the rest made by U.S. rival Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
Intel and other parties in the case will tell their side of the story on Tuesday and Wednesday to a hearing officer. She will make no decision but report to the top antitrust official in the European Union, Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes.
The Commission, executive arm of the EU, says Intel tried illegally to persuade computer makers to shun AMD in favour of its own chips by using rebates as a carrot -- and a stick.
It could fine Intel, though any penalty would be unlikely to approach a cap of 10 percent of annual turnover, and possibly damage the firm's reputation by labelling it an unfair competitor.
The Intel case is often compared with the Commission's fight against Microsoft, which the EU executive fined 899 million euros ($1.39 billion) late last month for failing to comply with antitrust sanctions.
But a competition lawyer in London said the two were very different. The Microsoft case focused on the tying together of products and the withholding of information needed for its competitors' offerings to work with those of the software giant.
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