"Apple's model labour practices" are a subject that's currently being discussed in some fairly major Web sites. Whether Apple is a scapegoat or not depends on what people understand about Apple's obsolescence model. The short story is that Apple underpays for the production of very expensive-yet-disposable hardware, unlike what rural China has to cope with.
Beating Microsoft might warm the cockles of Apple fans' hearts, but it really isn't the best benchmark if you understand the statistics.
Statistics are not the media's long suit, however. In the last few days, the headlines have been screaming about a spate of suicides at Apple's supplier, Foxconn. Trades union and labour activists have been calling for a boycott of Apple's next iPhone, to punish the company for doing business with a firm where the poor, abused workers apparently see no way out but to jump off the roof.
Steve Jobs: iPad Suicide Factory 'Pretty Nice'
Apple CEO Steve Jobs said the Taiwanese-owned iPad factory that's been branded a sweatshop amid a rash of worker suicides is actually "pretty nice."
Jobs said that he found reports that Foxconn employees were throwing themselves off high buildings rather than working on Apple gadgets deeply disturbing. After all people who work for Apple stores are happy to work for peanuts in an autocratic environment just for the privilege of touching a slice of Jobs' Dream. We guess he thought the Chinese would be the same.
Foxconn has raised pay among workers in China by an average 30 percent, but it says that the raise has nothing to do with a string of suicides that some experts say global media have misattributed to everything from poor working conditions to rapid modernization.
Driven by cult hero Steve Jobs, Apple has now surpassed Microsoft as the largest tech company in the United States. Reihan Salam on why it's ripe for a fall.