mohit9206
Golden Member
- Jul 2, 2013
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Yeah still waiting for that in depth Anandtech GTX 960 review!GTX 960 review coming soon!![]()
Yeah still waiting for that in depth Anandtech GTX 960 review!GTX 960 review coming soon!![]()
You should watch the video that explains all your concerns. Basically, it is designed to be broad and long lasting, only so they don't have to keep writing up new ones for each and every product. The end result is exactly the same. They can't talk about trade secrets ever (they never give anyone but people making them trade secrets, so this means nothing to most people involved), and they can't reveal info on a new product until they the given date they specify. They can also opt out of the NDA when ever they choose.None are this broad and this long lasting and I'm not even talking purely about the computer hardware businesses.
This seems specifically crafted to prevent signers from being able to EVER talk about GPP or the similar bullshit they will undoubtedly do next.
How convenient? Why not make it 1000 years NDA then? Why sign new NDA every 5 years? Why not every 1000 years? Why not an NDA for EVERYTHING that lasts for INFINITY? I mean after all its to get away from the boring new NDA's, right? Who likes writing new NDA's every few years, hah?You should watch the video that explains all your concerns. Basically, it is designed to be broad and long lasting, only so they don't have to keep writing up new ones for each and every product. The end result is exactly the same. They can't talk about trade secrets ever (they never give anyone but people making them trade secrets, so this means nothing to most people involved), and they can't reveal info on a new product until they the given date they specify. They can also opt out of the NDA when ever they choose.
The only difference between now and previous NDA's, is they don't have to create new NDA's for each product they give out ahead of release.
This is 100% for GPP and future similar anti consumer, monopolistic policies.
This Non-Disclosure Agreement (the "Agreement") is made and entered into as of the date of execution (the "Effective date"), by and between NVIDIA Corporation, a Delaware corporation, on behalf of itself and its Subsidiaries (collectively "Disclosing Party"), and recipient identified below ("Recipient")
...
1. Confidential Information. "Confidential information" shall mean any and all technical and non-technical information disclosed or made available to Recipient from time-to-time by the Disclosing Party
All they had to do was mention the GPP existence to those under NDA and it would have been covered.If this is genuinely the case, then Nvidia has some shitty lawyers, seeing as the whole situation surrounding the reporting about GPP wouldn't actually be covered by the terms of this new NDA.
The NDA only covers confidential information that the recipient receives directly from Nvidia (see below), not confidential information that they receive from third parties. HOCP (who broke the GPP story) didn't receive their info on GPP from Nvidia, but instead from a third party (AMD to be specific).
I would also love to read a legal opinion of what would have happened during the GPP scandal if such an NDA were in effect at the time, considering news outlets only had rumors to work with - all their official sources were under NDA. What would have happened if they asked NVIDIA about it or were previously given info on GPP and told it was confidential information?
I know the leaked NDA does not prohibit the press to discuss information that has entered the public domain, but it seems to me GPP news that transpired from HardOCP would not be allowed to come from a news outlet that signed this NDA, and further more it may be difficult for such an outlet to even pick up this news from another source.
The NDA only covers confidential information that the recipient receives directly from Nvidia (see below), not confidential information that they receive from third parties.
Someone told AMD, Nvidia wants to be able to sue the redacted out of them in court the next time they tell AMD. Under this new NDA they can.If this is genuinely the case, then Nvidia has some shitty lawyers, seeing as the whole situation surrounding the reporting about GPP wouldn't actually be covered by the terms of this new NDA.
The NDA only covers confidential information that the recipient receives directly from Nvidia (see below), not confidential information that they receive from third parties. HOCP (who broke the GPP story) didn't receive their info on GPP from Nvidia, but instead from a third party (AMD to be specific).
Directly from the NDA (My bolding):
All they had to do was mention the GPP existence to those under NDA and it would have been covered.
From my previous post:
Can you prove (give up your sources) that the CI wasn't from Nvidia and do you want to prove it in a court of law/deposition while forking over thousands in attorneys fees?
Someone told AMD, Nvidia wants to be able to sue the shit out of them in court the next time they tell AMD. Under this new NDA they can.
I missed the Denmark part. Heise.de is German.
de is Germany.
dk is Denmark.
Lol. When using "something is rotten in the state of Denmark" - one does not literally refer to Denmark today.
In this particular context it was implied that Nvidia = Denmark.
I don't have to prove anything. If Nvidia wants to sue someone (like HOCP) for breach of the NDA, then the burden of proof lies with Nvidia to prove that the info came from them.
Assuming HOCP were under NDA then sure it does, all they need to do is mention it before HOCP receives info from third parties.Nvidia simply mentioning GPP does not magically make any previous info HOCP has recieved from third parties subject to the NDA.
Sigh. You miss the point. I'm talking about potentials in the future, not what happened with the GPP story.
The smart businessman (tech reviewer/news journalist, youtuber etc.) looks at this nda and should be worried about lawsuits that could bankrupt them. Burden of proof is nice but the current court system in the USA favors the big guy with million dollar law firms.
Assuming HOCP were under NDA then sure it does, all they need to do is mention it before HOCP receives info from third parties.
Sounds something like this: "Hi guys, we have some early info we'd like to share with you: we're on the verge of launching a new program with a number of AIBs called GeForce Partner Program. It's gonna be great, the next step in ensuring Nvidia powered products receive the top tier branding they deserve. We'll get back to you with more info as soon as we get details locked in with our partners. PS: We just love being able to talk to you about this stuff!"
Nope, they would only have to do this for a sensitive situation like GPP and only divulge enough info as to make talking about the subject near impossible or extremely risky.but since Nvidia cannot know ahead of time which info might get leaked to HOCP (or other outlets/competitors), then that means that Nvidia would in effect have to mention literally every little bit of confidential information to the outlet to make sure it's covered by the NDA, which is a laughable idea.
That would be covered by the contents in my pretend statement. They wouldn't be able to mention the existence of the program and the fact that it's related to AIBs. Even mentioning the word "branding" might be risky.we've heard from third parties that Nvidia is starting a new OEM initiative which would involve all of this bad stuff...
Nope, they would only have to do this for a sensitive situation like GPP and only divulge enough info as to make talking about the subject near impossible or extremely risky.
That would be covered by the contents in my pretend statement. They wouldn't be able to mention the existence of the program and the fact that it's related to AIBs. Even mentioning the word "branding" might be risky.
That's the beauty with an NDA that has such a large scope in both time and covered information: it can easily lead to unforeseen ramifications and prevent people speaking about it for years. Previous NDAs, as described by the press, had very limited scope: product launch info and time restraints until publish was allowed. This new breed of NDA has the potential to be manipulated in some very interesting ways, and while this may not be the case and Nvidia may be as honest about this as possible, it was still a very bad move on them in the wake of the GPP fallout.
No the court system does not favour the big guy in this kind of situation. If the leaked info didn't come from Nvidia then the defendant (be it a tech reviewer, news journalist, youtuber or whatever), would have zero problem getting a motion to dismiss approved, since the info then wouldn't be covered by the NDA, and thus Nvidia has no valid legal claim.
Yes, and that would take 6-12 months and $50k+ in lawyer fees
fees that you might not get covered by the opposition when you when.
And to do that the defendant will have to give up their sources.
The american legal system is basically setup for the big guy to squish the little guy, however if Nvidia tried it the backlash would far outweigh the benefits - there would be a huge wave of negative publicity and the little guy would probably get crowd funded through it. Hence they aren't going to be throwing around frivolous law suits.
Why get so upset with this NDA, and not all the others before that had the same restrictions, which include all rival companies? Probably because this was the first one you've read.One would hope but I'm too cynical to think it is a guarantee and in most cases not worth the risk.
Because it comes at the heels of Nvidia telemetry(spying without consent), at the heels of GPP, at the heels of GT 1030 with DDR4 memory, etc... People connect the dots and figure out they'd love to be able to prevent people from talking about this as much as they can. Obviously it's not 100% report proof, but they clearly want to prevent it as much as possible and at least from their point.Why get so upset with this NDA, and not all the others before that had the same restrictions, which include all rival companies? Probably because this was the first one you've read.
Why get so upset with this NDA, and not all the others before that had the same restrictions, which include all rival companies? Probably because this was the first one you've read.
Is that NV's ultimate goal here? To quash their "leaks"?And to do that the defendant will have to give up their sources.
Oh.Not at all. We're talking about a motion to dismiss here. The exact nature of the source (a factual matter) isn't relevant here, since motions to dismiss only deals with questions of law, not questions of fact.
If a motion to dismiss is granted, it is done so before any evidence is presented by either party.
All these NDA's have permanent bans on leaking secret info. The only things they are allow to repeat are allowed to be talked about at the date given, and not before. The 5 year time, is just so they aren't writing new NDA's for new products.No, because this one has a 5 year time limit on it just after the GPP scandal.
