axbom’s avataraxbom’s Twitter Archive—№ 30,252

              1. 1) In Digital Compassion I outline seven ways in which people experience negative impact from tech and digital services. Number six is what I call ”neglect of ecosystem”.
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              2) "Neclect of ecosystem" is harm based on the failure of an organisation to assume responsibility for people occupying the extended ecosystem necessary for the development and use of its services and products.
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            3) For example, many thousands of miners in the Democratic Republic of Congo work each day to excavate cobalt by hand, for the benefit of lithium-reliant companies such as Apple, Alphabet (Google), Microsoft and Tesla. Roughly 60% of the world's cobalt originates in DR Congo.
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          4) Many of these miners are children working extremely dangerous mining jobs at the expense their educations and futures. They are being regularly maimed and killed by tunnel collapses and other known hazards common to cobalt mining in the DRC.
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        5) A US lawsuit in Washington DC is now being brought against several tech companies, arguing how they have failed to acknowledge and protect child laborers. Children are undoubtedly part of the supply chain needed for the everyday devices these companies profit from.
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      6) On behalf of 14 parents and children from the DRC the companies are accused of aiding and abetting the mining companies that profit from child labor in dangerous conditions, that ultimately has led to death and serious injury.
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    7) I encourage you to read the lawsuit. But be warned that it contains many heartbreaking stories and images of children whose legs have been crushed by collapsed tunnels and falls. One child was, without warning, shot in the back by a guard. (Links at the end)
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      8) Microsoft has stated that ‘tracing metals such as cobalt up through multiple layers of our supply chain is extremely complex.’ Yet, compared to the supply chain due diligence that many companies have started to develop in relation to 3T and gold, cobalt is no more difficult.
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        9) Many of these companies claim to have a zero tolerance policy when it comes to child labor in their supply chains. They have not provided details of investigations and checks that they have undertaken to identify and address child labor in their cobalt supply chains.
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          10) On March 3, 2017 it was reported that Apple had temporarily suspended purchasing DRC cobalt from Huayou Cobalt because of continued documentation that young children were performing hazardous work, and Huayou Cobalt was indifferent to this.
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            11) But, in Apple Supplier Responsibility 2018 Smelter and Refiner List, Apple continues to list “Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt Co., Ltd.” as a supplier of DRC cobalt and claims to have conducted a “third party audit.”
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              12) "Apple, Microsoft, Dell, and Huayou Cobalt may manipulate the various middlemen of their supply chain to deceive and distract the public, but the parties remain participants in a 'venture' to ensure that [they] will have a steady supply of cobalt from Huayou Cobalt" — lawsuit
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                13) The lawsuit does its due diligence in outlining the exploitation of DRC starting with 16th-19th century slave trade, King Leopold's forced labor and terror for extracting ivory and rubber, finishing on the new wave of tech exploitation of the powerless, starving Congolese.
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                  14) From the lawsuit again: "Defendants know and have known for a significant period of time the reality that DRC’s cobalt mining sector is dependent upon children, with males performing the most hazardous work in the primitive cobalt mines, including tunnel digging."
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                    15) "These boys are working under stone age conditions for paltry wages and at immense personal risk to provide cobalt that is essential to the so-called 'high tech' sector,dominatedb y Defendants and other companies."
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                      16) "For the avoidance of doubt, every smartphone, tablet, laptop, electric vehicle, or other device containing a lithium-ion rechargeable battery requires cobalt in order to recharge."
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                        17) The action is brought on behalf of the plaintiffs themselves but also all other similarly situated current and former child workers. A fund is requested to fund appropriate medical care for Plaintiffs and members of the class who were injured while mining cobalt.
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                          18) I also want to mention that being exposed to cobalt is itself hazardous. A respiratory disease caused by exposure, cobalt lung, is a form of pneumonia which causes coughing and can lead to permanent incapacity and death. This is why it's one of the worst forms of child labor.
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                            19) There is a compelling case outlining how it is clear that the companies are well aware of the child labor, giving examples of programs that have been announced in the name of human rights allowing "people to anonymously voice concerns in their local language".
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                              20) Again, from the lawsuit: "Apple and the other companies are relying on largely illiterate, desperately poor, and exceedingly vulnerable people to figure out Apple’s complaint mechanism and report supply chain violations when they certainly cannot afford ->
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                                21) personal computers or iPhones and they do not have internet or cell phone access to connect to the outside world within the context of a violent regime that does not tolerate dissent and an unregulated industry that could retaliate with impunity against any whistleblowers."
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                                  22) Before I start sharing links I want to make something abundantly clear: - If you build apps, you are reliant on cobalt-mining for the functioning of those apps. - If you own a phone you are reliant on cobalt-mining Many of us share in the responsibility.
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                                    23) What you can do: * Buy used phones and laptops * Keep your phones and laptops for longer * Bring your old phones and laptops in for recycling and re-use * Help create awareness of ongoing exploitation * Hold exploitative companies accountable
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                                      24) Source: Class complaint for injunctive relief and damages iradvocates.org/sites/iradvocates.org/files/stamped%20-Complaint.pdf "Defendants Apple, Alphabet (Google), Dell, Microsoft and Tesla are knowingly benefiting from and aiding and abetting the cruel and brutal use of young children in Democratic Republic of Congo"
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                                        25) US Department of Labor, List of Goods Produced by Child Labor or Forced Labor: dol.gov/ilab/reports/child-labor/list-of-goods
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                                          26) THE COBALT PIPELINE Tracing the path from deadly hand-dug mines in Congo to consumers’ phones and laptops (from 2016) washingtonpost.com/graphics/business/batteries/congo-cobalt-mining-for-lithium-ion-battery/?tid=lk_inline_manual_3
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                                            27) Is your phone tainted by the misery of the 35,000 children in Congo's mines? "My field research shows that children as young as six are among those risking their lives amid toxic dust to mine cobalt for the world’s big electronics firms" theguardian.com/global-development/2018/oct/12/phone-misery-children-congo-cobalt-mines-drc#img-1
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                                              28) CNN Freedom Project: Child miners face death for tech (from 2013) thecnnfreedomproject.blogs.cnn.com/2013/06/26/child-miners-face-death-for-tech/
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                                                  30) Brief educational video from FreetheSlaves Conflict minerals from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) find their way into the supply chain of products we use every day—like laptops, cell phones and batteries. Slavery also exists. vimeo.com/freetheslaves/slavery-in-your-pocket-the-congo-connection