EU Fines Chipmaker Qualcomm $1.2bn
The world's biggest mobile phone chipmaker was found to have 'illegally shut out rivals'.
The world's biggest mobile phone chipmaker was found to have 'illegally shut out rivals'. Aoife White from Bloomberg in Brussels tells us what the European Commission believes Qualcomm did wrong. Also in the programme, an investigation by the Financial Times alleges widespread sexual harassment at a charity fundraising dinner attended by senior figures in business and finance in London last week. Madison Marriage went undercover for the paper, and explains what she saw at the event. We talk to US consumer products giant Procter and Gamble's group president for North America, Carolyn Tastad, who is at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Our reporter in Sao Paulo brings us the latest from the courtroom where former Brazilian president Luis Ignacio Lula da Silva is hearing the outcome of an appeal against a nine-year prison sentence for corruption. Plus we find out why so-called 'kidult' toys, often bought by adults, for adults, are drawing attention at the London Toy Fair.
(Picture: A Qualcomm sign. Picture credit: Reuters.)
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- Wed 24 Jan 2018 15:32GMT大象传媒 World Service except Australasia & News Internet