Report: Nvidia’s French offices subjected to raid over allegations of anti-competitive practices

Report: Nvidia’s French offices subjected to raid over allegations of anti-competitive practices

France’s competition watchdog has⁤ raided the local offices of chipmaker Nvidia while investigating anti-competitive⁤ practices‌ in the⁢ graphics cards ⁣sector‍ with a focus on cloud computing.

While the competition watchdog did not confirm the ​identity of the ‍entity‍ being ⁤investigated or‌ the⁣ practice in⁢ question, a report from ‌The Wall Street Journal cited sources saying that the raids conducted ‌targeted Nvidia.

The watchdog, however,⁣ confirmed that ​the operation was a result of it trying ​to ​investigate the graphics cards sector as part of an expanded study to understand anti-competitive practices in the cloud computing sector. The⁢ study, according to ‍the watchdog, was started in January 2022.

Nvidia’s rise to‌ prominence, post the ​proliferation of generative AI, as the top chip supplier to large software vendors and cloud service providers, such as​ Salesforce, ServiceNow, AWS, Google Cloud, and⁣ Microsoft, could be among the top ​reasons for‍ the watchdog’s interest in the ​chipmaker.

In February, Nvidia announced plans to⁢ ship its DGX Cloud to Oracle, Google Cloud, and Microsoft. The DGX Cloud combines the company’s GPU-based compute systems called DGX Pods with ⁤an AI ⁣enterprise software‌ stack.

The chipmaker blew past expectations for its most recent quarter and numbers disclosed showed‌ that enterprise sales now‌ constitute 76% of Nvidia’s total revenue. ‍Experts and analysts also ​believe‍ that Nvidia‍ is‌ “uniquely suited to benefit from the growth of AI ​in hardware.”

Nvidia’s rivals in the generative AI-processing silicon⁣ space include the likes of AMD, a startup named Ampere, and the cloud⁢ service provider themselves who are⁣ developing their own chips for‌ supporting next-generation ⁤AI workloads.

Oracle’s⁤ recent $400 million investment into Ampere for​ generative AI‌ workload-supporting chips⁣ also underlines the demand‍ for such processors. Oracle has also agreed⁢ to pay over $100 million for buying such chips this month.

Raids not proof of guilt for the chipmaker

The French competition watchdog has noted that though raids were conducted in the graphics⁤ cards sector, the searches themselves were not proof of guilt or any wrongdoing.

“Such dawn raids do not pre-suppose the⁢ existence⁢ of a breach ⁢of ⁤the law, which could be⁤ imputed to the company ​involved in ⁣the alleged ‍practices, which only a full investigation into⁤ the ⁤merits‍ of the case could establish, if appropriate,” a ​statement from the watchdog read.

However, ​in the last few weeks, large technology companies have attracted the ⁣attention of anti-competitive agencies in alleged complaints of employing unfair practices for conducting business.

Earlier this month, Alphabet-owned Google ⁢was accused⁣ of creating a monopoly through the use of exclusivity contracts with device manufacturers and software providers‍ that make Google‌ the default search ⁢engine for a given‍ device ​or platform. The trial, ‌which echoes the turn-of-the-century Microsoft antitrust case in…

2023-09-29 13:24:03
Article from www.networkworld.com rnrn

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