Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by gofigure 1665 days ago
Politically, 'big tech' is on the defensive and this is one way for FTC to show some teeth.

That being said, nVidia is currently not playing in ARM's space, so it's hard to argue that this acquisition will harm US consumers or raise prices for them. Hence my feeling is that this is politically motivated, at least to some extent.

Also, we (the US) are entering a period of intense competition with China that may last decades and may even include acts of war. Semiconductors are a key area of competition. More US control of key semiconductor assets is in the US interest. However to be totally fair that doesn't typically concern anti-trust law. But it should concern the current administration and drive some of these decisions about where to focus. It would be very different if this was about social networks and funny cat gifs.

2 comments

> That being said, nVidia is currently not playing in ARM's space, so it's hard to argue that this acquisition will harm US consumers or raise prices for them. Hence my feeling is that this is politically motivated, at least to some extent.

Huh? They currently use arm designs in the Nintendo switch and their own shield line. They also utilize them in their mellanox Ethernet adapters and network switches. What makes you believe that won't give them a reason to increase prices for competitors that also use ARM chips, if not outright refuse to grant them a license?

> nVidia is currently not playing in ARM's space

Look who ARM licenses to and what sort of products those clients manufacture. They are in direct competition right now in a number of areas.