The US Department of Justice (DoJ) has called off its investigation into
allegations that graphics firm ATI and its parent AMD had violated federal
antitrust laws.
AMD
received
a subpoena from the DoJ in late 2006, shortly after the company wrapped up
its
$5.4bn
acquisition of ATI.
The investigation centred on price-fixing allegations among graphics card
vendors, particularly ATI and its chief rival Nvidia.
AMD had never put up much of a fight in the investigation, vowing to
cooperate with all requests for information and to comply with any DoJ orders.
The case is unrelated to AMD's other high-profile antitrust row, in which the
company accuses Intel of violating antitrust laws worldwide in its dealings with
vendors during the two firms' battle over the desktop and server CPU markets.
Termination of the ATI investigation will come as welcome news to AMD. The
company last week attempted to reverse its recent economic woes by
spinning
off its manufacturing operations into a partnership with the United Arab
Emirates government known as The Foundry Company.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article