Do you remember initial reviews showing anything? The issue was reported months after launch, and Nvidia had sold a shi*ton of cards by then.They really can't hide that kind of flaw. If tests shows that there's slower part of memory, it's easy to prove with showing test data that the flaw exists and you don't have to use nvidia given "Confidential information" as source. It's even actually said on that nda in chapter 3. Recipient shall not be liable for disclosure of Confidential Information that... c) is or was independently developed by employees of recipients.
But that was given as an example: It was a defect that was known by Nvidia well before launch and as far as tech news goes this was of public interest. But there are plenty of such examples where you would be interested in knowing and can't be "independently proved" by a reviewer. Any details that you can't squeeze out of the actual board that you buy will stay buried fro 5 years.
What if you find out that Nvidia is actively manipulating the cryptomining market to keep prices up? One Nvidia rep sends you an email under NDA giving you a short overview of how they are "developing new ecosystems" and "nurturing innovation" and then tells you all of this is for your eyes only. Good luck reporting on that.
The signatory is also the only one receiving any information from Nvidia. The only way for anybody else at TPU to report on that information is if Nvidia allows it or it's public domain... Meaning someone else broke the NDA. Otherwise you will have to be just as out of the loop as I am since you would be receiving 0 sensitive information legally.The NDA only hold the signatory individual as responsible. Just read it... and the only person who would sign an NDA is the person getting the hardware/information. The rest of our organization is not affected as long as there is no discussion between us about it.
Even if it is covered by NDA, there are ways around that. NDAs of this sort in this industry really do nothing but provide necessary protections for the stock market. They have a very specific purpose. I'm also not in the US, so not subject to US law directly. Of course, I mean myself, not TPU.
I'll give you an example:
So, I post the launch day of the next VGA. I guess this date, based on the past (ie, my birthday, which is when they usually launch cards), and I get this date right. Maybe this date is covered by NDA< but since it was not disclosed to me directly, should I decide to post it on the front page, they can't be held responsible for what I do, because IT SPECIFICALLY SAYS THAT in the NDA.
This ensures that the worries you have mentioned here are not a real worry... it just means that whoever signed the NDA will not be the person to explore such subjects. Fortunately, there are many people that contribute here.
I also gave you an example where they could preempt your attempt at "guessing" anything by giving you just enough information to make it "not a guess". Or an industry source tells you Nvidia is having trouble getting something to work and may delay the launch... Not rightfully obtained. All Nvidia has to do is tell you under NDA that they might be delaying the launch to work on improving the tech an customer satisfaction. Again, good luck reporting on that and proving that you did not base it on info obtained under NDA.
People are taking this too lightly especially when it comes to companies that abused morality repeatedly and are already using the exact same tactics used now to gag people. Just as a hint: the NDA for developers using Nvidia Gameworks.
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