Foxconn Reportedly Used Illegal Student Labor to Manufacture iPhone Xs

Workers at a Foxconn facility in 2010. (Image: AP)

Hon Hai Precision Industry, more commonly known as Foxconn, came into the public consciousness earlier this decade when a salvo of exposés described the degrading and often dangerous conditions its poorly-paid workers endured to build expensive trinkets like the iPhone. Today, the Financial Times reports that illegal labor practices persist.

Six students, ages 17 to 19, claimed they’d regularly worked 11-hour days at a Foxconn-run factory as part of workweeks over 40 hours, violating Chinese labor laws concerning overtime for student interns. Both Apple and Foxconn confirmed to the Financial Times that students worked overtime. These six claimed to be part of a group of 3,000 student workers assembling parts for the brand new, $1000 iPhone X.

The students were reportedly sent to Foxconn by the Zhengzhou Urban Rail Transit School as part of a mandatory, three-month “work experience” program. The relevance to future employment in the rail transit industry is unclear. Ms Yang, a student who complained of being forced into work that “has nothing to do with our studies,” said she has been assembling iPhone X cameras, up to 1,200 every day.

While illegal overtime may be a far cry from installing suicide nets on buildings to keep overworked assemblers from ending their lives on the job, Foxconn remains one of the largest employers in the world, and, in this instance, acting on behalf of one of the richest technology companies. It seems unlikely either will experience lasting repercussions of any kind.

We’ve reached out to Apple and Foxconn for comment and will update this story when we hear back.

[Financial Times]

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Android has tracked location info regardless of privacy settings

When you tell your phone to stop sharing your location, you expect it to honor your request, don’t you? Unfortunately, that hasn’t been entirely true with Android as of late. Quartz has confirmed that, starting in early 2017, Android phones have been sending the addresses of nearby cellular towers and sending it back to Google, regardless of your location sharing settings — even if you didn’t have cell service turned on and hadn’t used any apps. In theory, Google or an intruder could have triangulated your approximate position using the data for multiple towers.

A Google spokesperson stressed that the tower info, known as Cell ID codes, wasn’t being used and was tossed out as soon as it was received. The company had been "looking into" using the data to speed up message delivery. Also, Google has promised to end the behavior. Android phones will stop sending Cell ID by the end of November.

The immediate threat to your privacy wasn’t high, then. Google wasn’t spying on people, and a hacker wouldn’t have found a treasure trove of data sitting on Google’s servers. However, the real concern is that Google decided to transmit location info despite your privacy settings, using a service (the network sync system) you couldn’t turn off. Simply put, the company wasn’t fully respecting your intentions — you couldn’t completely eliminate the risk of location-based surveillance.

Source: Quartz

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First-Known Interstellar Object Looks…Pretty Weird

Scientists now have an idea of what the first recorded extra-solar asteroid looked like.
The hunk of rock of that whipped through the solar system in October looks like no other asteroid we’ve seen before, they say, long and thin like a javelin and colored red from millions of years of accumulated radiation exposure. The coloration wasn’t surprising, but the shape was, say astronomers from the European Southern Observatory. Most objects astronomers observe in our solar system are roughly

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India-based Mahindra opens Detroit HQ, wants to sell EVs in U.S.

DETROIT — Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd, one of India’s oldest vehicle manufacturers, is testing autonomous tractors, trucks and cars, while moving closer to bringing electric vehicles to the United States, Chairman Anand Mahindra said on Monday.

The company, which opened a new North American headquarters north of Detroit on Monday, is considering when to begin U.S. sales of the vehicles, Anand Mahindra said in an interview. Mahindra’s managing director described a similar ambition earlier this month.

Mahindra is weighing whether the vehicles should carry its own brand or those of its affiliates Pininfarina, the famed Italian design house; and Ssangyong, a Korean manufacturer of utility and crossover vehicles, he added.Mahindra & Mahindra bought Ssangyong in 2011 and Pininfarina in 2015. The Indian parent is collaborating with both companies on developing electric vehicles, including premium models for Pininfarina that likely would compete with Tesla.

Earlier this year, Autocar India reported that Pininfarina was developing a family of electric vehicles for China’s Hybrid Kinetic Group that includes the elegant H600 hybrid sedan, as well as its own electric supercar, the H2 Speed Concept. It’s also working on a supercar with Emerson Fittipaldi.

The magazine also reported that Ssangyong planned to launch an all-electric crossover vehicle in Korea in 2019.

Anand Mahindra suggested that Ssangyong and Pininfarina electric vehicles might be sold in both the United States and China.

In early November, Ssangyong said it had received approval to begin testing of autonomous vehicles in Korea, but did not say when it planned to produce them.

Anand Mahindra said his company, one of the world’s largest tractor manufacturers, had been testing self-driving models since it bought a minority stake in Japan’s Mitsubishi Agriculture Machinery in 2015. Mahindra & Mahindra operates several U.S. tractor assembly plants.

While work on the self-driving vehicles is still in the early stages, Mahindra & Mahindra has been building electric vehicles in India since the mid-1990s, when it developed a small fleet of battery-powered, three-wheeled rickshaws for use in Delhi, the chairman said.

Mahindra & Mahindra bought Reva Electric Car Co, a small Bangalore-based manufacturer, in 2010 and transformed it into Mahindra Electric Mobility Ltd, which designs and builds compact electric vehicles for the Indian market.

In mid-September, the company renewed ties with Ford through a new alliance that envisions sharing of technology, product development and parts sourcing, especially on electric vehicles.

The companies had a short-lived joint venture, Mahindra Ford India Ltd, established in 1995. Ford took control of the venture in 1998 and renamed it Ford India.

Reporting by Paul Lienert

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Apple Criticized for Not Investigating App Developer Who Faked Her Cancer

A screenshot of Belle Gibson’s now defunct app, The Whole Pantry (left) and Gibson trying a prototype of the Apple Watch before it was released (right)

When the Apple Watch launched in 2015, Belle Gibson was touted by Apple as a star. Not only had Gibson supposedly cured her own cancer through healthy eating, she now had an app for both the iPhone and Apple Watch that could help others do the same. But now that her own cancer and “cure” have been exposed as fake, people are asking what responsibility Apple had to the public.

Gibson, a 25-year-old from Australia, developed a line of health products like a cookbook and app after claiming that she cured her own brain cancer through healthy eating in 2013. She was eventually exposed as a fraud in April 2015 and was found guilty earlier this year of not distributing some of her profits to charities as she had promised. An Australian court fined her $320,000 US, almost all the money she made from her brand The Whole Pantry.

But now that the court documents have been made available to Australian media, the role that Apple played in this mess is being scrutinized. Apple made a big deal of Gibson before she was exposed and even reportedly flew her to the US to consult on the Apple Watch before it was released. Photos from that time show Gibson using the Apple Watch before the public even knew it existed and when it was finally released, her app The Whole Pantry was featured on the Apple homepage.

A screenshot of an Apple Watch promotion from 2015 touting Gibson’s app, The Whole Pantry, before it was ultimately pulled from the App Store

So what did Apple know about Gibson’s fraud? Apple hasn’t responded to Gizmodo’s request for comment, but Australian media reported over the weekend about some of the communications between Apple employees and Gibson.

When the press started asking hard questions and raising doubts about her astonishing claims in April of 2015, Apple’s internal emails about their star app developer show that the company was ready to stand by Gibson.

“[The] unfortunate article focused on highlighting startup entrepreneurial issues of competing and conflicting goals, dismissive of great work already done or to be done. Worst of all, it compromises the latter,” one internal message said, according to the Sydney Morning Herald.

“Spoke with Belle earlier and she is pragmatic about this unpleasantness and determined to take forward steps continuing in the work instead of drawing interest to this kind of blind-sightedness,” another internal Apple message revealed in court reads.

Even after the revelations first came to light, the messages show that Apple was ready to stand by Gibson. It wasn’t until late April 2015 that Gibson finally came clean in a magazine article for Australian Women’s Weekly and the newspaper The Australian. And even then, the internal messages were reportedly less concerned about setting the record straight than they were about covering their own asses.

“Belle is waiting for this to blow over and is taking legal advice, but this morning that may have changed. When we hear from her we’ll let you know. The story is now a full national news story, and our removal of featuring will be commented on,” one of the messages from Apple reads.

Two authors, Beau Donelly and Nick Toscano, just released a book about Gibson called The Woman Who Fooled the World which details some of the horrendous things that Gibson did to keep up her cancer charade.

“There’s nothing new in cancer scamming,” Toscano recently told The Guardian. “There have always been snake-oil salespeople. There have always been people like [Gibson]. But where this story differs is her explosion to success, and her incredible reach was made possible by a number of intensely modern forces.”

Indeed, the role that new media played, from Gibson’s earliest promotion of her cancer hoax on Instagram, to her development of an app to rake in hundreds of thousands of dollars, does give this old timey scam a new twist. And Apple will have to do some soul searching about the way that it handled this fraud.

Australia fined Gibson’s publisher $30,000 for not fact-checking her book, something that would be unheard of in the United States where there’s no requirement or even expectation that publishers fact-check their books. But at the very least, companies like Apple pay for incidents like these with their reputation. And when you’re touting the story of a woman who claimed to cure her brain cancer with healthy eating, you’d hope that a company like Apple would do a little investigating for itself.

[Sydney Morning Herald]

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Ridiculously Waterproof Fly Survives Dives Into Toxic Lakes

An alkali fly creates a protective bubble in order to dive in Mono Lake. (Image: Floris van Breugel / Caltech)

If you’ve ever seen an outdoor swimming pool between cleanings, then you’re well aware of the death trap that standing water can be for flying insects. Bees, grasshoppers, and flies all easily tumble into the chlorinated sea, only to find themselves drenched and unable to fly away. But one type of fly is both at home in the air and under water. Alkali flies (Ephydra hians) dive into a lake, feed on the bottom, and shoot back to the surface to fly away, staying drier than a saltine the whole time. Now, scientists have figured out how they pull it off.

If you’re an aquatic organism, California’s Mono Lake isn’t the easiest place to try and make a life. The huge, shallow lake is three times as salty as the Pacific Ocean. It’s also ridiculously alkaline, with a pH similar to that of detergent, making the water feel soapy and slippery. This combination makes its waters deadly to most animals and plants. But, Mono Lake does support some life, like bacteria, large blooms of algae, and trillions of brine shrimp. It also hosts enormous numbers of waterfowl and shorebirds—migratory and resident alike—many of which feed on one of the lake’s more famous phenomena: vast, black clouds of alkali flies.

Mono Lake. (Image: Floris van Breugel)

The alkali fly is found across western North America, but it does particularly well for itself at Mono, where it breeds in massive quantities. As larvae, the insects largely graze on algae. Incredibly, the adults do this too, taking advantage of the plentiful underwater food source that contrasts with the barren lakeshore.

Once the adult flies crawl beneath the surface, their bodies are almost entirely enveloped by an air bubble as they nonchalantly walk around, looking preposterously out of place. They can stay down for up to fifteen minutes at depths of 25 feet or more, using the bubble as an air source and a layer of protection from their caustic dive site. The flies also lay their eggs at depth, quite literally because they can (no fish are around to harass them). When their scuba sesh is complete, they pop up to the surface like a cork, and fly off.

Researchers at the California Institute of Technology investigated just how they accomplish these feats, and their findings—published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences—suggest that the alkali fly’s never-wetting superpowers come from an effective coupling of fly fuzz and god-tier waterproofing.

To get an understanding of the interaction between the chemical and physical properties of the flies and Mono Lake’s water, the research team developed a method for measuring the amount of force it takes for the fly to dip into and emerge from the water. By taking alkali flies, gluing them individually to tungsten rods, and using a motor to raise and lower a container of water, the researchers were able to dip the flies at a controlled rate. This fly-dunking contraption also used specialized instrumentation to measure the amount of force exerted on the fly as it was plunged into the water, and how much force was used to escape the water.

They found that alkali flies have to exert forces up to 18 times their body weight to enter the water, hulking out and gripping the bottom with burly claws on their feet, pulling themselves along against the buoyancy of their bubble. The team also found that Mono Lake’s water was particularly hard to escape from, with the alkali flies being “pushed” out of the water less with higher concentrations of the lake’s water in a mixture.

An alkali fly. (Image: PNAS)

To test how the lake’s water chemistry might be behind this effect, the researchers did more fly dunking experiments with solutions of different salts found in the water, and with varied pH. Their results suggested that dissolved sodium carbonate is the primary culprit, creating a surface film of negatively-charged carbonate ions that pull water around the tiny hairs along a fly’s positively-charged outer surface, more effectively drenching the hapless insect than regular freshwater. So, the researchers did more dunking experiments, this time in sodium carbonate solution and including other species of flies. The only flies not mired on the surface? The unflappable alkali flies, of course.

Looking way closer at all the flies with a powerful microscope showed that the alkali flies differed from their tiny relatives in that they were extra hairy. All flies have protective hairs that—combined with a waxy veneer on the exoskeleton—help create a modestly water-repellant surface. But the alkali flies looked like they had taken a swim in some Rogaine, likely amplifying this protective effect.

The flies also seem to have improved their waxy outer coat. When the team rinsed flies in hexane, dissolving that layer, they lost their ability to stay dry in Mono’s water. The researchers identified the chemical components of the protective layer, and found that, compared to other flies, the alkali flies boosted the use of compounds well-suited to wicking off water full of carbonate ions.

This waxy, exceptional fuzzy wuzziness makes the alkali fly’s outer surface “superhydrophobic,” pushing the lake’s harsh water away as the insect enters the water, generating a nice, protective blanket of air. This amplified version of the normal insect waterproofing system has allowed alkali flies to exploit a predator-free environment for food and reproduction in strange, spectacular fashion.

The unique evolutionary side-step may also be of interest to the world of materials science. Superhydrophobic properties are coveted for a wide range of applications, from protecting electronics from water damage, to reducing fouling on seafaring vessels, to potentially making roads safer in wet and icy conditions. Gleaning inspiration from organisms for engineering purposes—”biomimicry”—is already a major input into applications for superhydrophobia (like improving raincoats by emulating the properties of duck feathers), so it’s very possible the humble alkali fly’s extreme waterproofing may contribute to human innovation.

Jake Buehler is a Seattle area science writer with an adoration for the Tree of Life’s weird, wild, and unsung—follow him on Twitter or at his blog.

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This Guy Is Living My Fantasy of Flying Like a Bird

Even with the hours of preamble as I shuffle through the airport to my gate, flying is still an amazing experience for me. But taking off in a commercial airliner isn’t anywhere near as magical as the way Jean-Baptiste Chandelier takes flight in this stylishly-edited new video, which makes paragliding look as close to being a bird as any human can hope to be.

Dangling beneath a parachute powered by nothing but breezes and thermal currents, Chandelier can fly high in the air, but he’s also able to skim the ground at incredibly low altitudes, even momentarily touching down before taking flight once again. This is exactly how I want to fly to my next vacation, I just haven’t figured out what I’ll do with my suitcase.

[YouTube via Neatorama]

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