Skip to main content

Foxconn workers sign ‘no suicide’ pledge

Foxconn
Image used with permission by copyright holder

According to the Daily Mail, Foxconn workers are required to sign agreements saying they will not commit suicide. The Chinese manufacturing company, which is responsible for a significant amount of iOS devices, has been tied to may sordid reports of overworked staff, and four years ago an employee committed suicide after an iPhone 4 prototype in his care went missing. He unfortunately was not the only such casualty, and shortly thereafter a handful of Foxconn workers also took their lives.

The plant has become synonymous with its workers strife, and within the last two years has seen 14 employees commit suicide and various others attempt to. One died of exhaustion after a 34-hour shift. Earlier this year, with bad press mounting, Apple investigated the facility for its Supplier Responsibility progress report. COO Tim Cook even made the trip, and Apple executives sought to “better understand the conditions at the site.” According to the report, Apple instituted various policies to improve moral, such as a 24-hour care center, counselors – even securing nets around the building to prevent future suicides. All that, and apparently a no suicide agreement.

Foxconn workers sign pledges saying that will not commit suicide, and that if they do their families can only seek minimum damages (there has been concern some workers commit suicide to secure money for their families). Despite Apple’s attempts to improve the plagued facility, a recent investigation claims conditions are as harrowing as ever. A study from the Centre for Research on Multinational Companies and Students & Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior revealed Foxconn’s treatment of its employees: Workers cannot speak to each, work massive amounts of overtime, cannot visit their families, and are humiliated if they do not meet standards, among other things.

According to the report, the increasing demand for iPads and iPhones has made factory life all the more demanding, as workers struggle to meet higher and higher production targets. This isn’t the first time Foxconn has made recent news: Last week, three of its employees were arrested for allegedly leaking an iPad 2 prototype.

Editors' Recommendations

Molly McHugh
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
How to sync your Outlook calendar with an iPhone or iPad
Series of three smartphones showing Outlook on mobile.

Outlook is a Microsoft program that runs on your computer and is an essential tool for scheduling appointments, work-related and otherwise. It's really helpful to sync your Outlook calendar with your iPhone so you can keep up with things while you're on the go. However, it's not necessarily obvious how to go about doing so.

Read more
I tried the Apple Vision Pro. Here’s why it won’t replace my iPhone
Christine wearing the Apple Vision Pro demo unit.

The Apple Vision Pro is one of Apple’s most fascinating new product launches. It’s the first new product line from Apple since the Apple Watch, but the hype around it has been more like when Apple first introduced the original iPhone. Of course, Apple was not the first to the market with a VR/AR headset, but it is definitely what would be considered the most “mainstream” option out there, considering the brand name.

When Apple announced the Apple Vision Pro on June 5, 2023, during its WWDC 2023 keynote, I was excited. After years of rumors, it was finally happening. Preorders started on January 19, 2024, and the  Apple Vision Pro launched on February 2, 2024, in the U.S. The problem? It costs at least $3,500, making it a hard sell for many as a first-generation Apple product.

Read more
Could the Vision Pro replace your iPad? There’s just one problem
The front visor of the Vision Pro on display at an Apple Store.

In the time since it launched in early February, we’ve heard a lot about how Apple’s Vision Pro could replace some of the company’s other devices, especially the iPad. Now, prominent leaker Mark Gurman has joined the fray and lent weight to the idea of the headset becoming a tablet killer. But while that seems plausible, there’s one major problem with it.

Specifically, it’s the price. Because while Gurman’s Power On newsletter makes some good points about the Vision Pro’s strengths, it can’t get around the unavoidable obstacle that is the device’s $3,500 asking price. If the Vision Pro really is going to replace the iPad, a lot has to change first, especially given how wide of a range of prices the iPad line hits.
The iPad killer?

Read more