IBM, GlobalFoundries Settle Lawsuits Over Contract, Trade Secrets
The companies said in a joint statement the terms of the settlement were confidential and would allow them to “explore new opportunities for collaboration.”
GlobalFoundries bought IBM’s semiconductor plants in 2015. IBM sued the Malta, N.Y.-based company in New York state court in 2021 for allegedly breaking a $1.5 billion contract to make high-performance chips for IBM.
GlobalFoundries, which is majority owned by Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund Mubadala, separately sued Armonk, New York-based IBM in New York federal court in 2023 for allegedly misappropriating its chipmaking trade secrets and sharing them with Intel INTC.O and Japanese consortium Rapidus during partnerships with the two companies.
An Intel spokesperson declined to comment on the settlement. Spokespeople for Rapidus did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The U.S. Commerce Department awarded GlobalFoundries a $1.5 billionsubsidy in November to expand its semiconductor production in New York and Vermont.
(Reporting by Brittain in Washington; Editing by David Bario, Mark Porter and Paul Simao)
- TikTok’s New Owner Stands to Inherit 1,500 Safety, Privacy Suits
- How A Long-Lived Super-Regional Carrier is Implementing AI in Claims
- Trump’s Trade War Forces Canada into Decision on Whether to Hit US Autos
- VW, Stellantis, Renault Among Firms Fined $495M Million by EU