Inside Facebook's African Sweatshop
... These young Africans work for Sama, which calls itself an “ethical AI” outsourcing company and is headquartered in California. Sama says its mission is to provide people in places like Nairobi with “dignified digital work.” Its executives can often be heard saying that the best way to help poor countries is to “give work, not aid.” The company claims to have helped lift more than 50,000 people in the developing world out of poverty. ... Despite their importance to Facebook, the workers in this Nairobi office are among the lowest-paid workers for the platform anywhere in the world, with some of them taking home as little as $1.50 per hour, a TIME investigation found. The testimonies of Sama employees reveal a workplace culture characterized by mental trauma, intimidation, and alleged suppression of the right to unionize. The revelations raise serious questions about whether Facebook—which periodically sends its own employees to Nairobi to monitor Sama’s operations—is exploiting the very people upon whom it is depending to ensure its platform is safe in Ethiopia and across the continent. And just as Facebook needs them most, TIME can reveal that content moderators at Sama are leaving the company in droves due to poor pay and working conditions, with six Ethiopians resigning in a single week in January. ... “The work that we do is a kind of mental torture,” one employee, who currently works as a Facebook content moderator for Sama, told TIME. “Whatever I am living on is hand-to-mouth. I can’t save a cent. Sometimes I feel I want to resign. But then I ask myself: what will my baby eat?” ... https://time.com/6147458/facebook-africa-content-moderation-employee-treatme... -- EN ===================================================================== Prof. Enrico Nardelli Direttore Laboratorio Nazionale "Informatica e Scuola" del CINI Dipartimento di Matematica - Universita' di Roma "Tor Vergata" Via della Ricerca Scientifica snc - 00133 Roma tel: +39 06 7259.4204 fax: +39 06 7259.4699 mobile: +39 335 590.2331 e-mail: nardelli@mat.uniroma2.it home page: http://www.mat.uniroma2.it/~nardelli blog: http://link-and-think.blogspot.it/ ===================================================================== --
Il 18/02/22 07:03, Enrico Nardelli ha scritto:
.[...] https://time.com/6147458/facebook-africa-content-moderation-employee-treatme...
Nell'articolo (BTW: Grazie, Enrico, per il link!), mi sono subito fermato su questo passaggio: ==================== [...] [Sama] executives can often be heard saying that the best way to help poor countries is to “give work, not aid.” [...] ==================== In realta', secondo me, la soluzione vera passa per l'educazione (la formazione scolastica), chiaramente a condizione che venga fatta asetticamente, SENZA influenze (di tipo commerciale, in primis). Sto seriamente valutando l'ipotesi di (provare a) fare un salto in Rwanda [che, per chi non fosse aggiornato sugli sviluppi in Africa centrale, è, attualmente, uno dei posti piu' tranquilli e "sereni" che si possono trovare da quelle parti] e supportare la locale Università - https://ur.ac.rw/ - a "strutturarsi" con un minimo di infrastruttura IT, da cui partire con percorsi base (universitari). Da quello che vedo on-line, gia' solo aiutarli a mettere in piedi una infrastruttura di posta che li "liberi" da Outlook, sarebbe un buon primo passo... Solo che è complicato [per me] anche solo capire se c'e' possibilita'/interesse, da parte loro (contattarli è una missione quasi impossibile!) :-( Che voi sappiate, c'e' qualche Ateneo (nostro, intendo), che ha all'attivo dinamiche di "cooperazione" con il Rwanda, da cui si potrebbe partire? Thanks, DV -- Damiano Verzulli e-mail: damiano@verzulli.it --- possible?ok:while(!possible){open_mindedness++} --- "...I realized that free software would not generate the kind of income that was needed. Maybe in USA or Europe, you may be able to get a well paying job as a free software developer, but not here [in Africa]..." -- Guido Sohne - 1973-2008 http://ole.kenic.or.ke/pipermail/skunkworks/2008-April/005989.html
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Damiano Verzulli -
Enrico Nardelli