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Where The Workers Who Made Your iPhone Sleep At Night


Foxconn's factory in Shenzhen, China, is home to about half of its 420,000 workers. They make many of our gadgets and computers, then walk to dormitories on the 2.1-kilometer-square campus. I got to look inside.
Exclusive Look: Where The Workers Who Made Your iPhone Sleep At Night











This dorm is one of the older ones on campus, built near the beginning. It's a men's dorm—women have separate facilities—and populated mostly by entry-level workers.
Exclusive Look: Where The Workers Who Made Your iPhone Sleep At Night










Since a spate of eleven suicides earlier this year, every building on the Foxconn campus is draped in netting. It is morbid but seemingly effective; there have been no suicides since the nets were installed in May.
Exclusive Look: Where The Workers Who Made Your iPhone Sleep At Night









Hallways remain institutionally empty, kept dim to save energy, keep the temperature down, and to allow workers who keep a late schedule to sleep with less interruption during the daylight hours.
Exclusive Look: Where The Workers Who Made Your iPhone Sleep At Night









A dorm room. Eight workers sleep in four bunk beds in a room about the size of a two-car garage.
Exclusive Look: Where The Workers Who Made Your iPhone Sleep At Night









Toiletries kept on a shelf in mugs.
Exclusive Look: Where The Workers Who Made Your iPhone Sleep At Night









A television viewing room is available on each floor. I joked with the Foxconn executive who was with me that of all the places in the world that could probably manage to get bigger television screens installed, it was probably here at Foxconn, who make televisions for the world's largest brands.
Exclusive Look: Where The Workers Who Made Your iPhone Sleep At Night









Workout equipment in the spaces between buildings.
Exclusive Look: Where The Workers Who Made Your iPhone Sleep At Night









In a newer dorm, a sink is shared on the balcony, where workers can wash their clothing and themselves. Management of the living quarters has recently been outsourced to a local operations company in an attempt to address concerns about an employer managing living conditions of its workers. It's unclear how outside management will fundamentally alter the nature of on-campus living.
This special report is a partnership between Gizmodo and WIRED Magazine.
via Gizmodo

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