Meta sued in Kenya over claims of exploitation and poor working conditions
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A
former moderator working for Facebook owner Meta Platforms Inc on
Tuesday filed a lawsuit alleging that poor working conditions for contracted
content moderators violate the Kenyan constitution.
The
petition, also filed against Meta's local outsourcing company Sama, alleges
that workers moderating Facebook posts in Kenya have been subjected to
unreasonable working conditions including irregular pay, inadequate mental
health support, union-busting, and violations of their privacy and dignity.
The
lawsuit, filed by one person on behalf of a group, seeks financial
compensation, an order that outsourced moderators have the same health care and
pay scale as Meta employees, that unionization rights be protected, and an
independent human rights audit of the office.
A
Meta spokesperson told Reuters: "We take our responsibility to the people
who review content for Meta seriously and require our partners to provide
industry-leading pay, benefits and support. We also encourage content reviewers
to raise issues when they become aware of them and regularly conduct
independent audits to ensure our partners are meeting the high standards we
expect."
Sama
declined to comment before seeing the lawsuit but has previously rejected
claims that its employees were paid unfairly, that the recruitment process was
opaque, or that its mental health benefits were inadequate.
The
lawsuit's specific requests for action are more granular and wide-ranging than
those sought in previous cases and could reverberate beyond Kenya.
"This
could have ripple effects. Facebook is going to have to reveal a lot about how
they run their moderation operation," said Odanga Madung, a fellow at the
Mozilla Foundation, a U.S.-based global nonprofit dedicated to internet rights.
Globally,
thousands of moderators review social media posts that could depict violence,
nudity, racism or other offensive content. Many work for third party
contractors rather than tech companies.
Meta
has already faced scrutiny over content moderators' working conditions.
Last
year, a California judge approved an $85 million settlement between Facebook
and more than 10,000 content moderators who had accused the company of failing
to protect them from psychological injuries resulting from their exposure to
graphic and violent imagery.
Facebook
did not admit wrongdoing in the California case but agreed to take measures to
provide its content moderators, who are employed by third-party vendors, with
safer work environments.
Violent
videos
The
Kenyan lawsuit was filed on behalf of Daniel Motaung, recruited in 2019 from
South Africa to work for Sama in Nairobi. Motaung says he was not given details
about the nature of the work reviewing Facebook posts before his arrival.
The
first video Motaung remembers moderating was a beheading. The disturbing
content piled up, but Motaung says his pay and mental health support were
inadequate.
"I
have been diagnosed with severe PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder),"
Motaung told Reuters. "I am living ...a horror movie."
Motaung's
lawyers said that Meta and Sama created a dangerous and degrading environment
where workers were not given the same protections as employees in other
countries.
"If
in Dublin, people can't look at harmful content for two hours, that should be
the rule everywhere," Motaung's lawyer Mercy Mutemi said. "If they
need to have a psychologist on call that should apply everywhere."
Shortly
after joining Sama, Motaung tried to form a union to advocate for the company's
roughly 200 workers in Nairobi.
He
was fired soon after, which he and his lawyers say was because of the
unionization attempt. Union rights are enshrined in the Kenyan constitution.
Sama
has not commented on this allegation.
Motaung's
experience was first revealed in an investigation published by Time magazine in
February.


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