I believe Intel was using its larger share of the market to price competition out of the running and I dont see that they were 'paying businesses to only stock Intel' but I guess it could be interpreted that way. Sounds more like picking sides than it does justice.
Wrong,
Here is part of the press release from the commission -
Intel gave rebates to computer manufacturer A from December 2002 to December 2005 conditional on this manufacturer purchasing exclusively Intel CPUs
Intel gave rebates to computer manufacturer B from November 2002 to May 2005 conditional on this manufacturer purchasing no less than 95% of its CPU needs for its business desktop computers from Intel (the remaining 5% that computer manufacturer B could purchase from rival chip maker AMD was then subject to further restrictive conditions set out below)
Intel gave rebates to computer manufacturer C from October 2002 to November 2005 conditional on this manufacturer purchasing no less than 80% of its CPU needs for its desktop and notebook computers from Intel
Intel gave rebates to computer manufacturer D in 2007 conditional on this manufacturer purchasing its CPU needs for its notebook computers exclusively from Intel.
Furthermore, Intel made payments to major retailer Media Saturn Holding from October 2002 to December 2007 on condition that it exclusively sold Intel-based PCs in all countries in which Media Saturn Holding is active.
A, B, C and D are widely regarded as being Dell. HP, NEC. Lenovo, Acer (not neccessarily in that order).
The commission seen nothing wrong with rebates, Intel can continue to give them, however they may not attach such conditions to them.
Press release here -
http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/09/745&format=HTML&language=enYou can read the true extent of Intels tactics.
Bear in mind this is now the third country to find Intel guilty, with the U.S. likely to be the next.