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Businesses China Apple

Apple's Longtime Supplier Accused of Using Forced Labor in China (washingtonpost.com) 157

One of the oldest and most well-known iPhone suppliers has been accused of using forced Muslim labor in its factories, according to documents uncovered by a human rights group, adding new scrutiny to Apple's human rights record in China. From a report: The documents, discovered by the Tech Transparency Project and shared exclusively with The Washington Post, detail how thousands of Uighur workers from the predominantly Muslim region of Xinjiang were sent to work for Lens Technology. Lens also supplies Amazon and Tesla, according to its annual report. Lens Technology is one of at least five companies connected to Apple's supply chain that have now been linked to alleged forced labor from the Xinjiang region, according to human rights groups. Lens Technology stands out from other Apple component suppliers because of its high-profile founder and long, well-documented history going back to the early days of the iPhone.
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Apple's Longtime Supplier Accused of Using Forced Labor in China

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  • Don't they have, you know, cameras monitoring the manufacturing floor? Seems like a simple way to actually monitor the supply chain.

    • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday December 29, 2020 @02:19PM (#60876146)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Don't they have, you know, cameras monitoring the manufacturing floor? Seems like a simple way to actually monitor the supply chain.

      How could you tell from a camera at the manufacturing floor if they were forced labor or not?

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday December 29, 2020 @03:29PM (#60876418)

      A camera would tell you nothing.

      These are not people chained to their desks. They are (allegedly) people sent to work in a factory instead of being incarcerated in one of the Xinjiang internment camps. Within the factory, they are going to look like a normal worker doing their job.

      TFA has no actual evidence that this is happening, other than allegations by activists. But even if the workers are asked, they will likely deny it since the alternative is to be sent back to Xinjiang to be incarcerated, or retaliation against their families.

      There is also a danger that a supply chain crackdown could lead to discrimination against Uyghurs. An obvious way to avoid allegations that they are coerced is to not hire them at all. Uyghurs are already discriminated against and poorer than Han Chinese, and they need jobs.

      • by shanen ( 462549 )

        Mod parent up.

      • Slaves need jobs? (Score:2, Informative)

        by Don Bright ( 6770394 )

        From the Verge: "Lens Technology was sent thousands of workers from Xinjiang to work in its factories in the Hunan province as part of a “poverty alleviation” program carried out by the Xinjiang–Suzhou Chamber of Commerce.". . . "Many of these workers previously lived in indoctrination camps"

        If you believe that this was part of a legitimate anti poverty campaign I would invite you to explore the behavior and history of the Chinese communist party.

        Hundreds of millions of people have been ab

        • So Apple itself is saying that what you are proposing as acceptable, is not, in fact, acceptable to Apple.

          I did not "propose" anything, nor did I say anything was "acceptable".

          As for the idea you can never know what goes on inside factory, I beg to differ.

          I have no idea what you "differ" from. I never said we can't know what goes on in a factory.

    • They don't monitor - it's a contractor. Contractors win by the lowest price or they don't get the bid. Welcome to capitalism.
      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday December 29, 2020 @04:14PM (#60876644)

        They don't monitor - it's a contractor.

        Apple has promised to verify their entire supply chain, including contractors.

        Contractors win by the lowest price or they don't get the bid.

        Contracts often go to a higher bidder who offers better quality or faster fulfillment.

        The company makes glass for cellphone screens. It is unlikely that Apple prioritized saving a few cents over the quality of the screen for a $1000+ product.

        • by Junta ( 36770 )

          A common tactic a company uses when it has the scale that Apple does is to insource manufacturing. Once you have something like iPhone scale, then you pretty much lose the efficiency gain of being but one device in a sea of devices for a contract manufacturer.

          So why not insource if it is a path to potentially save cost? Well, situations like this are nicer. You get to be oblivious to what your manufacturer does, in spite of a very public stance against bad labor practices. When your vendor gets caught, you

    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      I'm guessing you were in a hurry to FP? If not, what's your excuse?

      Or can you explain how you can look at camera images and reliably detect the differences among prison labor, wage slavery, debt slavery, indentured servitude, or happy campers who are voluntarily doing the same task over and over again. Yeah, it's been a long time since I actually worked in a factory, but I really don't see how your idea is supposed to work. Even with sound, my working time looked pretty tedious. You'd get a more favorable i

    • Business Ethics unfortunately isn't a cut and dry topic. International Business relations too is a very complex topic.

      It is extremely easy for a business even one with good intentions to cross the line into unethical and possibly illegal territory.
      People want to buy Apple Devices, Apple wants to sell them, and make a profit.
      Apple has competitors many based in different countries, with a different set of morals, and laws.
      So if Apple were to stand up to Western standards while their competitors do not. That m

      • Business Ethics unfortunately isn't a cut and dry topic. International Business relations too is a very complex topic.

        Using forced labor is very much a cut and dried topic. There is absolutely no moral/ethical ambiguity about it. Not for any nation that claims to be civilized.

        So if Apple were to stand up to Western standards while their competitors do not. That means their competitor will have the advantage.

        No, it doesn't necessarily mean that, particularly with a company like Apple. Apple makes fine products, but it is also all about image and brand. Standing up for western standards enhances their brand. Appearing indifferent to forced labor hurts their brand.

        The Truth is most consumers really don't care how their device is made, and who needed to die or were enslaved to make it.

        Where are you getting these ideas? The "capital T" Truth is exactly the opposite. 60% [supplychainbrain.com]

    • Apple likely doesn't have access to footage like that.

  • First of all, I wonder how much "forced labor" is occurring in the U.S.A. that goes unreported? With a large illegal population from the south, no doubt there are many unacceptable situations. The point being, we have to be careful how a headline paints a scenario. That a huge company supplying Apple with products that may have unacceptable practices occurring within the system does not implicate Apple in a direct way. You could look at ANY huge company on Earth and find MANY unacceptable practices hiding a
    • by Krishnoid ( 984597 ) on Tuesday December 29, 2020 @02:34PM (#60876204) Journal

      It doesn't even go unreported [youtu.be]. Thank goodness for a free press, I guess.

    • How about hold the company liable? Say Apple make sure your suppliers are not using forced labor or face fines / sanctions.

      They could easily hire 2 people to review those places as their only job and report back to apple. This way it would protect apple from those fines / sanctions.

      Instead they want to say "hey we asked and they said they were being good, it's not our fault."
      When they are not held responsible they will never force their suppliers to correct their actions.
       

    • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Tuesday December 29, 2020 @02:49PM (#60876264)

      Don't you know?
      In America, you always have the Freedom(TM), to not work for Rockefellerians, and always have the choice to starve and die on the street.

      They're gonna keep the vast majority of the wealth your work creates, so you have to keep working to have a decent life, and they don't, because they have you.
      But don't criticize those dear Job Creators(TM). They give *you* work. (And you give them money? Wat?)
      It's all your own fault, little Annie! If you weren't mooching on the backs of others ... like we are ... you wouldn't have to live in a trailer and take a dick to the mouth!

    • inmate labor at $0.15/hr or you can go to the hole.

      • Don't be stupid. "The hole" doesn't have room in any given American prison for more than a tiny percentage of the inmate population. It's a major problem when it comes to disciplining inmates. They definitely don't have room in "the hole" when it's already full of people who are fighting and raising hell that they're having problems situating in gen pop without getting one of their less-problematic inmates beaten, robbed, and/or killed.

        Many prisons (especially state prisons) have too little work to go ar

    • Whatabouterty (Score:5, Interesting)

      by TopSpin ( 753 ) on Tuesday December 29, 2020 @03:39PM (#60876464) Journal

      Apple/Foxconn worker and environmental exploitation rationalization worksheet

      Check all that apply

      [_] Apple wasn't the first-ever client of Foxconn
      [_] Making iPhones in a Chinese factory is better than being a Chinese peasant
      [_] iPhones/Pads would cost too much if I had to pay my fellow citizens to make them
      [_] iPhones/Pads would cost too much given environmental regulations I vehemently insist on for myself
      [_] All the other manufacturers are doing it too
      [_] Some/Many/Most Chinese workers appreciate 70 hour weeks and breathing my aluminum dust
      [_] It's not Apple, it's Foxconn
      [_] It's not Apple, it's the Chinese government
      [_] They should quit if they don't like it
      [_] It's just capitalism at work
      [_] It's just communism at work
      [_] Apple's disposable workers are paid better than non-Apple disposable workers
      [_] Apple's auditors didn't find any serious issues
      [_] Some day the Chinese will be too wealthy to exploit
      [_] Your Android is Foxconn too
      [_] You're an Apple hater using Apple as a scapegoat
      [_] I also work 60/80/100/120 hour weeks at my IT job
      [_] Apple designers are in the US
      [_] The US did the same thing to the British
      [_] The US had slaves once too
      [x] The US has prison labor today
      [_] It's up to the Chinese to stand up to their oppressive government
      [_] There are lines of eager workers outside Foxconn factories
      [_] If any company were to stop the exploitation, I really think it'll be Apple
      [_] Your free Linux runs on Chinese hardware too
      [_] Foxconn workers think they have it great, so it's ok!
      [_] Foxconn worker suicide rate is lower than Chicago's murder rate
      [_] Foxconn worker suicide rate is lower than China's suicide rate
      [_] We can't pollute the whole world!
      [_] Half of all US households have an Apple product
      [_] If we don't exploit them they'll never develop
      [_] The suicide's families get the insurance money
      [_] You're posting from a macbook/iphone/ipad right now
      [_] There are suicide nets on American bridges
      [_] Interns in the US don't get paid
      [_] They don't beat the workers, apparently.
      [_] Why is this news? We expect this from China.
      [_] It's their country; we have no right to judge.
      [_] If it's voluntary it's ok; their body, their choice
      [_] Only 11 hours/day? Come over to the U.S. and do 12-hour days!
      [_] Things are tough all over; I had a job in high school
      [_] isn't this the case for all smart phones, of all brands?
      [_] an iPhone is more important (than workers rights)
      [_] Android phone assemblers were abused worse
      [_] That's how it was in the 19th century
      [_] I'm tired of the Apple Shaming Society
      [_] We should automate all jobs

      • by shanen ( 462549 )

        Mod parent funny and insightful, but when did you prepare that LONG joke?

        • by TopSpin ( 753 )

          but when did you prepare that LONG joke?

          Been around here a while now. Every time another story about China and Apple come up regaling folk with horror stories of awful labor conditions and outrageous environmental damage incurred while make iStuff I collect whatever new rationalizations appear. That list is probably older than some of the people that contributed to it today. :)

          • by shanen ( 462549 )

            Hmm... In that case I have to ask to be modded "ignorant" (again) and by reference to the defeatist spam-fighting "We surrender" joke of similar options, I have to change my recommended moderation to "redundant". Still mostly valid options, however.

            However you did give me a weird idea. How could we get valid "job satisfaction" scores for Chinese and American workers. Various other countries, too. Kind of a Utilitarian approach? A bit of a linguistic problem, since "satisfaction" is such a nebulous concept,

    • The USA has the largest prison labor force in the world. Our prisoners are singled out as not being protected from slavery under the 13th amendment. Getting upset at that practice in other countries is complete hypocrisy.
      • No, not even close. One is inflicted upon innocents for the circumstances of their birth, the other is a just punishment handed down by a court of law after one is convicted of a serious crime.

        You're comparing punishment for an individual's crime to the enslavement and genocide of an entire ethnic group. What the hell is wrong with you?

    • First of all, I wonder how much "forced labor" is occurring in the U.S.A. that goes unreported?

      You mean, like prison labor? No first hand experience but from what I've heard the prisoners do everything from sweeping the floors to making the food for something like $0.13 per hour.

      • And from what I've heard it is often a sought-after reward for good behavior. Keep in mind that the alternative is spending most of your time in a cell with nothing to do - breaking rocks in the hot sun may be a welcome distraction, making food definitely is.

        Also, don't forget that you don't end up in prison because you're religious. You have to commit and be convicted of a rather serious crime. In other words, you're comparing the consequence of an act someone chose to carry out, knowing full well wha

    • Most of the truly forced labor in the United States is sex work.

  • by WankerWeasel ( 875277 ) on Tuesday December 29, 2020 @02:28PM (#60876182)
    Amazon, Tesla, and many others use them as a glass supplier too. But headlines always call out Apple alone, as it's the name that drives clicks.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Type44Q ( 1233630 )

      But headlines always call out Apple alone, as it's the name that drives clicks.

      They're the biggest hypocrits this side of the Vatican.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by organgtool ( 966989 )
      Apple (or at least their fanbase) has been one of the loudest when it comes to claiming that Apple is environmentally and socially responsible. Whether it's Apple themselves pushing that image or their fanbase, I'm sure Apple enjoys the positive image it portrays of their company. Therefore, if they wish to maintain that image of being more wholesome than other companies, they're going to have to put in the effort to actually verify it. So far, what I've heard is that they make their suppliers and manufa
      • So you're cool with Tesla and Amazon doing so because they don't claim to not use forced labor? Got it. We should only hold some to such a high standard.
        • I never said that I was cool with Tesla and Amazon doing this. It should go without saying that no one should tolerate forced labor of any kind. But in the process of criticizing companies that benefit from bad behavior, people are going to prioritize that criticism for the companies that are claimed to be more virtuous than everyone else.
      • So far, what I've heard is that they make their suppliers and manufacturers sign documents which claim that they don't use forced labor but I haven't heard them taking any steps to actually verify that those companies don't use forced labor.

        If you say you haven’t heard anything, I’d suggest you’ve been burying your head in the sand. The information gets repeated in comments here and in linked articles nearly every time this sort of issue comes up.

        For instance, today’s linked article mentions Apple conducting internal audits at well over 1000 factories across nearly 50 countries last year alone, including surprise inspections. The article also mentions that Apple routinely publishes reports on those audits and the progre

    • Moreover, it’s an accusation of forced labor within the supplier’s factories, but not specifically within the factories that are part of Apple’s—or any other named company’s—supply chain.

      Apple and these other companies have neither the right nor ability to audit every factory at every supplier they hire, so it’s unrealistic to expect that level of accountability. After all, these suppliers make parts for competing or wholly unrelated companies, so they won’t/c

      • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

        It's true. That said, there have been concerns raised about Lens Technology before [actiondecareme.ch], so IMO Apple has a responsibility to dig a lot deeper to determine whether these allegations have any merit.

        Ten years ago, the response to an accusation like this would have been "We take every accusation seriously, and will investigate this and take action if we determine that our code of conduct was violated." And then two or three weeks later, you'd have your answer.

        Unfortunately, Apple has already denied the allegatio

  • The proud tradition of Siemens, Deutsche Bank and other companies.
    • And then they go and bitch if the Chinese take the inventions they told them to make, copy it, and have their own products, with blackjack and hookers!

      I'd do that too, if somebody treated me like that.
      There's a reason it's called imagimary property and monopolies and artificial scarcity are crimes in literally every normal industry!

  • Apple sold 15 million iphones in the U.S. in the second quarter of this year. These stories have been around before. It appears that except for a very few people nobody cares.
  • by awwshit ( 6214476 )

    You'll work hard with a gun in your back for a bowl of rice a day...

    Until we come up with alternate supply chains this kind of thing will continue.

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Tuesday December 29, 2020 @03:34PM (#60876436)

    Here's an article about Len TEchnology's founder

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    https://www.nytimes.com/2015/0... [nytimes.com]

    TL;DNR -she should know better.

  • Foxconn, the largest manufacturer of Icrap for apple has also been accused of human rights violations
    https://www.washingtonpost.com... [washingtonpost.com]
    No different than those cheap beedie smokes in 711 rolled by child slave labor: https://www.bbc.com/news/world... [bbc.com]
    Or McDonalds having their uniforms made prisons by workers who receive no benefits - including no social security - and if they complain they get thrown into solitary confinement. https://www.aljazeera.com/opin... [aljazeera.com]
    This is nothing less than slave labor
  • Let's be really clear: if you don't have the option to quit then it's slavery. China has enslaved some of it's population and now companies are using slave labor.

    Say it with me, S L A V E R Y.

    • probably concentrated prison camps...
      Forced prison labor is legal in the USA and many other counties. So China's prisons force labor... are you saying that because one can argue that they are temporary slaves this is actual slavery? Keep in mind the USA only banned private slavery.

      Also, are you implying that all forms of slavery are bad and should be stopped? What about the USA then? What makes 1 ok and the other so bad? Merely the "crime" that justifies it? or the label of "camp" or "school" etc for t

      • Forced prison labor is legal in the USA and many other counties.

        And it should be outlawed.

        Also, are you implying that all forms of slavery are bad and should be stopped?

        Yes.

        Point is, [bunch of bullshit]

        No, you are deflecting from my point that it's slavery and should be called such.

    • Well a lot of countries use prison labor. For example, who made your license plate?

      • Well a lot of countries use prison labor.

        If it is optional then that is one thing but if it is mandatory then it should be outlawed.

  • ...when they could be using good ol' fashioned American forced labour! How many other OECD countries have forced prison labour written into their constitution?
    • You do realize that there is a significant difference between a punishment assigned in a court of law by 12 peers after they determined "beyond a shadow of doubt", in full accordance with due process, that one is guilty of a crime, and the unjust enslavement of innocents on the basis of their religion or ethnicity, right?
  • Tim Cook isn't interested in this report unless you are wearing a leather jockstrap.

  • Um... it's China (Score:5, Interesting)

    by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Tuesday December 29, 2020 @05:16PM (#60876902)
    This is China, we're talking about. A place where individuals don't have rights, wearing a beard is an imprisonable offense, making fun of the political leader is cause for a prison sentence, the court system has zero independence from the ruling group, and workers have near-zero rights.

    Um. Yeah. News flash for anyone who hasn't been awake for the past 10 years. Of COURSE stuff made if China is often made with forced labor. Even if they totally-for-realsies-seriously-pinky-swear that it's otherwise. You. Simply. Don't. Believe. Them. Don't be shocked at it. Expect it.

    If this is a particular hill that you're willing to fight and die on, as a consumer, you should make sure that everything you buy was made, assembled and/or grown in the US, Europe, Australia, Taiwan, Korea or Japan. There are a few other countries that probably make this list, but not too many. Regarding cell phones specifically, I think that there are a few cell phone models (Sony? Kyocera?) that aren't done in China. If you want an iPhone, yeah, some of it was made under forced labor or near-slave-labor conditions.

    Except, oh wait .. US companies are well known to utilize.. wait for it .. prison labor. Same goes for Japanese companies. You can try to make a distinction between prison labor and forced labor, but you'll turn blue in the face and wind your brain into logical knots trying to do it.

    The world we live in isn't always nice. I'm not justifying it. Just pointing it out.
    • Why are you having trouble differentiating between a fixed term of punishment handed down by a jury in full accordance with the law and due process (plus opportunities for appeal), and the lawless, permanent, enslavement of innocents on the basis of their DNA or religious affiliation? Isn't that a bit like failing to distinguish between murder and killing in self defense the person trying to murder you?
  • Some things just cannot be permitted or forgiven. What evil is there to inflict upon an innocent that is greater than slavery?

    If there is another evil so great, it would be to strip them for parts. The CCP is guilty of this too.

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