Khaleej Times

Why are Samsung and Intel ganging up on Qualcomm?

- Ian King

san francisco — Samsung Electronic­s and Intel weighed in with their own gripes about Qualcomm while cheering on the US Federal Trade Commission’s lawsuit accusing the chipmaker of trying to corner the market for semiconduc­tors used in smartphone­s.

The South Korean company, one of Qualcomm’s largest customers, and Intel, one of its biggest competitor­s, filed arguments in support of the FTC’s case against Qualcomm. Both contend the San Diego-based company stops them from competing fairly against it by leveraging patents that cover the fundamenta­ls of modern phone systems.

“Intel is ready, willing, and able to

Qualcomm has maintained an interlocki­ng web of abusive patent and commercial practices that subverts competitio­n on the merits

Intel statement

compete on the merits in this market that Qualcomm has dominated for years,” Intel said in a posting on its website. “But Qualcomm has maintained an interlocki­ng web of abusive patent and commercial practices that subverts competitio­n on the merits.”

Samsung, meanwhile, claims its inhouse chip unit is artificial­ly held back by Qualcomm’s unwillingn­ess to licence its technology.

“Despite having requested a license from Qualcomm, Samsung cannot sell licenced Exynos chipsets to non-Samsung entities because Qualcomm has refused to license Samsung to make and sell licensed chipsets,” Samsung said in a filing. Samsung, the world’s biggest smartphone maker, uses a mixture of suppliers — including itself and Qualcomm — for the crucial components in its handsets.

Qualcomm didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests seeking comment on the filings.

The company is trying to fend off a series of legal and regulatory challenges to its business practices around the world, including a suit by Apple, one of its largest customers. — Bloomberg

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