Monday, June 3, 2024
Tech Workers in Kenya Appeal to President Biden
We've been posting a lot late about OpenAI. Whether it is paying Reddit so they can mine our brains to feed their chatbot, purloining Scarlett Johansson's voice and pretending they hadn't, or just being generally creepy by wanting its audio assistant to sound like the sex-obsessed operating system at the center of a disturbing, quasi-dystopian fantasy movie, OpenAI is fast becoming a tech giant that I hate as much as all the other tech giants.
This open letter to President Biden from Kenyan tech workers gives me a new reason to hate OpenAI, as well as some new reasons to hate the other tech giants. The Kenyan workers want President Biden to know that US tech giants are "systematically abusing and exploiting African workers," undermining local labor laws in Kenya, and violating international law standards, by imposing conditions tantamount to modern-day slavery.
Nairobi has very high unemployment. People are desperate for work and eager to work in the tech sector. But the opportunity comes at too high a price. The Kenyan workers perform content moderation for the platforms, labeling and training AI tools by "watching murder and beheadings, child abuse and rape, pornography and bestiality, often for more than 8 hours a day." For this work, some are paid less than $2/hour. They allege that they were not informed of the nature of their work when they were hired and that their work has caused them to suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder.
According to the authors, when Kenyan workers try to organize, they are collectively sacked, and the two companies, Meta and ScaleAI, simply moved their content moderation operations to other states, without paying workers back wages, even when ordered by Kenyan courts to do so. The workers call on President Biden to live up to his commitment to labor rights and worker-centered trade. Kenyans want tech jobs, but not tech jobs that will ruin their lives.
It doesn't seem like a big ask. The U.S. government should have the power to pressure the tech giants into paying foreign workers living wages, fostering humane work conditions, and complying with the laws of the foreign states in which they operate. These companies are the face of the United States abroad, and we want that face to be associated with technological innovation and economic opportunity, not with worker oppression bordering on enslavement.
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/contractsprof_blog/2024/06/tech-workers-in-kenya-appeal-to-president-biden.html