U.S. chipmaker Nvidia has sued EU antitrust regulators for accepting an Italian request last year to scrutinise its acquisition of AI startup Run:ai, saying they had flouted an earlier court ruling restricting their merger powers on minor deals.
Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) has filed a suit against a European Union regulator over what it views was an unnecessary probe into Nvidia's acquisition of Run:ai last year, according to Reuters. Last fall, even though the deal did not meet the notification thresholds set forth by the EU Merger Regulation,
Bitcoin falls below $85,000, dragging the crypto market further into decline. The global crypto market cap is down $1 trillion from its December peak. Nvidia
Nvidia (NVDA) is suing EU antitrust regulators for accepting an Italian request in 2024 to probe its takeover of AI startup Run:ai, claiming
European markets slipped into negative territory on Friday, as regional traders reacted to fresh tariff threats from U.S. President Donald Trump and a sell-off of chipmaker giant Nvidia 's stock.
Nvidia (NVDA) has sued EU regulators, challenging their investigation into its acquisition of Israeli AI startup Run:ai. The chipmaker is
Nvidia (NVDA) has taken legal action against EU antitrust regulators, filing a lawsuit with the Luxembourg-based General Court over their decision to accept an Italian referral to scrutinize its ...
Under its national Competition Act, Italy, however, expressed concerns and set off an EU-level investigation. By approving the inquiry based on what Nvidia regards as weakly defined discretionary ...
AxeleraAI, one of Europe's few companies making computer chips for artificial intelligence, has been awarded a grant of up to 61.6 million euros ($66 million) to develop a chip for use in data centres,
Investing.com -- U.S. chipmaker Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has taken legal action against European Union (EU) antitrust authorities for agreeing to an Italian request last year to examine its purchase of AI startup Run:ai. Nvidia alleges that the regulators disregarded a prior court decision that limited their authority over smaller deals.
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - U.S. chipmaker Nvidia (NVDA) has sued EU antitrust regulators for accepting an Italian request last year to scrutinise its acquisition of AI startup Run:ai, saying they had ...