I'm not a lawyer, nor have I studied the contract, but a superficial reading would imply that complete revocation is indeed the outcome of acquisition of either party. Do you have evidence to the contrary?
5.2 (c) Termination Upon Change of Control. Subject to
the terms of, and as further set forth in, Sections 5.2(d)
and 5.2(e), this Agreement shall automatically terminate as
a whole upon the consummation of a Change of Control of
either Party.
(d) Effects of Termination.
(ii) In the event of any termination of this
Agreement pursuant to Section 5.2(c), and subject to the
provisions of Section 5.2(e), the rights and licenses
granted to both Parties under this Agreement, including
without limitation the rights granted under Section 3.8(d),
shall terminate as of the effective date of such
termination.
This is true but irrelevant - it's Mutually Assured Destruction unless they reaffirm the contract, since both AMD and Intel would literally have to stop producing x86_64 chips without it. There is no way that Intel would allow that, their business would go into freefall.
I mean, even if they did manage to wreck AMD, it doesn't get them anything particularly useful if it costs them their x86_64 duopoly/monopoly.
Not to mention that AMD's current state is absolutely perfect for intel - too weak to be a serious threat, yet viable enough so that Intel is not a completely obvious monopoly that might attract unwanted regulatory intervention.
Even if the licensing problems went away, I'm not sure it's in Intels political/legal interests to lose their only plausible competitor. AMD can't be costing them a lot of money (the real risk is slow irrelevance if ARM usage grows any more), and the risks were AMD to cease operations considerable.
That is, until some ARM-based system can at least appear competitive enough to keep justice departments (and powerful negotiating partners like apple) at bay.
He doesn't, hence why he did not link to an article where AMD, Intel or VIA's lawyers say their cross licensing agreement allows them to be bought by another company.
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/2488/000119312509236...