Comment by hsbauauvhabzb
13 hours ago
Intel knowingly sold defective cpus and denied the defect until reports hit critical mass. I don’t think they care.
13 hours ago
Intel knowingly sold defective cpus and denied the defect until reports hit critical mass. I don’t think they care.
"knowingly" is meaningless, as otherwise they wouldn't even bother releasing errata lists; it's more likely that they underestimated the severity or their planned obsolescence calculations happened to be more statistically favourable than reality.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41041855
> "knowingly" is meaningless
You’re intentionally muddying the waters with meaningless philosophy. Even the law makes the difference between “knowingly” (with knowledge, intention, premeditation) and “mistake”. They didn’t knowingly break the CPU but they knowingly launched it despite their own internal findings, and knowingly blamed others when this came out.
But here you are claiming that the company must deserve the benefit of the doubt on their intent.
No, “knowingly” is most definitely not “meaningless”. And anyone who’s not naive or bad intentioned should make that difference and take note. Every time a company gets away with it because an army of philosophers washes away any guilt or plays it down with meaningless distinctions it becomes one more reason to do it again. Knowingly.
The link you provided doesn’t match your comment, one of the comments in that thread points out that Intel blamed motherboards during the early stages.
Yes let's give a 50 billion dollar corporation flooded with MBAs the benefit of the doubt lmao. If GamersNexus can be believed, it was extremely deliberate to try and sweep it all under the rug.
I don't think they've clarified which exact models of which serial number ranges are affected with oxidation to this day. It should've been a recall.