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smoothjazz | 2 years ago

It seems unthinkable that Intel would continue to invest in Israel. They should have never done it in the first place, and building a new fab would be at minimum a major PR disaster.

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isthatafact|2 years ago

Intel CEO (2017): "We think of ourselves as an Israeli company as much as a US company"

https://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Intel-CEO-We-think-of-ours...

For me it is one of many reasons to avoid Intel products, but I am not sure why their upcoming fab in Israel will be a PR disaster -- Intel will simply focus their PR on their USA factories.

tguvot|2 years ago

if you want to avoid products developed or manufactured in israel, you probably need to stop using any electronics products. and a bunch of medical.

runarberg|2 years ago

What was the impact of IBM collaborating with the Nazis prior to and during World War 2. It is my understanding that there was very little to no negative impact on their business from the bad PR.

Perhaps this is just a calculated risk Intel is willing to embark on. And with the number of anti-boycott laws and policies in America and Western Europe, I’m not surprise they’d take that risk. After all, both Siemens and Chevron are on the BDS boycott list for the Eurasia interconnector, but are very minimally (if at all) effected. So little in fact that I’m expecting Siemens to land a huge deal with California in building the trainsets for their high speed rail network.

bluefishinit|2 years ago

Did IBM have factories in the war zone though? BDS aside, I would think building any infrastructure in Israel would come with a very high risk of disruption or actual destruction.