The U.S. Department of Justice has not sent Nvidia a formal subpoena as part of its AI antitrust probe, Nvidia said late on Wednesday according to Blo

Nvidia denies it got subpoena from the U.S. DOJ in AI antitrust investigation

submited by
Style Pass
2024-09-05 01:00:10

The U.S. Department of Justice has not sent Nvidia a formal subpoena as part of its AI antitrust probe, Nvidia said late on Wednesday according to Bloomberg. This means that the DOJ has not officially made any complaints against Nvidia, and the company is formally not under an investigation.

Earlier on Wednesday Bloomberg reported that the U.S. DOJ had issued legally binding subpoenas to Nvidia and third-party companies like AMD and Intel as part of its AI antitrust probe that is focused around Nvidia's dominance in the AI sector. While Nvidia confirmed communication with the DOJ, it clarified that it has not been issued a formal subpoena but has received a request for information, or a civil investigative demand (CID).

While subpoenas and CIDs are used by investigators, these are different types of tools. A subpoena is a formal legal document that orders an individual or entity to either provide documents, appear in court, or testify before a legal authority and are usually issued during an active legal case. Subpoenas require compliance under threat of legal penalty. A CID enables agencies like the DOJ to request answers to written questions, give oral testimony, or documents, but CIDs are used to gather information for evaluating whether to pursue legal action. Therefore, they do not indicate a formal legal case is underway.

Antitrust officials are probing whether Nvidia behaves anticompetitively on the AI market by pressuring buyers to use its AI processors exclusively, disadvantaging its competitors, restricting customer options, and making it harder to switch from its processors to competing platforms. Nvidia denies all allegations.

Leave a Comment