badgenome said:
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that is crazy
and ugly
Have these nets been tested?
badgenome said:
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that is crazy
and ugly
Have these nets been tested?
Coca-Cola said:
and ugly Have these nets been tested? |
Well they didn't want people to keep killing themselves so they at least tried something? I guess.
Coca-Cola said:
and ugly Have these nets been tested? |
Surely you'd just roll off, and they look at least 2 stories high ... perhaps sufficent windows and security would be better ...
Pretty much par for the course in China.
Kotaku
On Jan. 2, over 300 employees at a Foxconn plan in Wuhan, China threatened to throw themselves off a building in a mass suicide. Foxconn makes Microsoft, Nintendo and Sony products. These workers manufacture Xbox 360s. According to Chinese anti-government website China Jasmine Revolution (via Watch China Times), the workers were protesting denied compensation they were promised.
On Jan. 2, the workers asked for a raise. Foxconn told them they could either keep their jobs with no pay increase or quit and get compensation. Most decided to quit with compensation. However, the agreement was supposedly terminated, and the workers never received their payments.
Website Record China reported that the uproar the incident actually caused Xbox 360 production to be temporarily suspended.
The mayor of Wuhan intervened to talk down the group down, and on Jan. 3 at 9pm, the group of 300 decided not to jump, ending what could have been a deadly game of chicken.
Suicides at Foxconn made major news in 2010 when over a dozen employees committed suicide, leading to Foxconn installing suicide prevention nets at some of its facilities.
In 2010, Kotaku asked Microsoft about Foxconn and the reported abuses. Microsoft's Phil Spencer said at the time, "Foxconn has been an important partner of ours and remains an important partner. I trust them as a responsible company to continue to evolve their process and work relationships. That is something we remain committed to—the safe and ethical treatment of people who build our products. That's a core value of our company."
Kotaku is following up with Microsoft over this latest incident.
UPDATE:
A Microsoft spokeperson replied to Kotaku with the following comment on the situation at Foxconn:
"Microsoft takes working conditions in the factories that manufacture its products very seriously, and we are currently investigating this issue. We have a stringent Vendor Code of Conduct that spells out our expectations, and we monitor working conditions closely on an ongoing basis and address issues as they emerge. Microsoft is committed to the fair treatment and safety of workers employed by our vendors, and to ensuring conformance with Microsoft policy."
Indignant workers threaten suicide at Foxconn park in Wuhan [Want China Times]
http://kotaku.com/5874706/report-mass-suicide-threats-at-xbox-360-plant
Machina said:
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Thats what I was thinking. Also it looks like if you hit one you would just bounce up and go over the side, they are almost angled downwards.
Platinums: Red Dead Redemption, Killzone 2, LittleBigPlanet, Terminator Salvation, Uncharted 1, inFamous Second Son, Rocket League
The "Anti-Suicide Nets" should be a decent treatment.
BasilZero said:
This is why contracts should of been made :( |
Yup. :(
So is this what really happens when you support an "American" console?
Machina said:
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Problem is, if you jump too far, you might land on the nets placed on the building in front. You have to get it just right. Either way, if you manage to accomplish such a feat, maybe you ought to think 'bout giving track sports a chance and avoid suicide altogether.