[Image of 19th Century Coal Companies]
VO: In the late 19th century, Robber Barons got this nifty little idea to put all their employees in a village where they owned the houses, the stores and the means of production; so while technically the employees weren’t slaves they paid the employees in company monopoly money which meant that not only did their employees work for effectively nothing but slowly took on debt. The song ‘16 Tons’ was made popular because it highlighted what an extremely gross abuse of power this was.
[Images of Walled Gardens and Alice and Wonderland]
VO: Apple has continued its love of walled Gardens by charging a third of all the income an app developer makes in order to work on their platform. Google does the same things and other companies including Microsoft and Sony are starting to take notice, but Apple claims it needs to take this money in order to offer proper safeguards for their environment. Then again, given that apple has made over 700 billion dollars in profits in the last 10 years, maybe they can afford to be a little less greedy.
[Images of Epic Games and Fortnight]
VO: Epic Games, the creators of the rando themed shootem up game Fortnight finally lost it with Apple and took them to court where all kinds of interesting details came up in discovery. Apple’s response to Epic setting up a payment method outside of Apple? They removed Epic from their appstore. At Apple, you buy from the company store, or you buy a new phone.
[Images of Locked Warehouses and Fires]
VO: Apple is also notorious for using locked contracts with their vendors but they are more notorious for working conditions in China where the iPhone is made. FoxConn had several employees on suicide watch just to keep them from killing themselves. They had an ACTUAL company store scenario with employees having to spend half their paychecks just to work in the lovely Apple sweatshop environments. In 2007, Apple, realizing that this was not a good look for the company, started a monitoring program. Of course, three years later, workers were dying due to a cleaner used on the screens in a similar manner to the Radium girls who painted watches in the 1930’s. Four years later, the BBC did an expose wherein Apple still hadnt fixed the problem. Apple, obviously, denied these allegations as it also denies allegations that it is using slave labor in the federally sanctioned region of the Ughyrs which lobbiests from Apple tried to weaken as much as possible.
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