Semiconductor Employees Suing IBM 273
An anonymous reader writes "According to the NYTimes's Bob Herbert, IBM has been killing its employees by exposure to dangerous chemicals - evidence is being offered by stricken employees that unusually
large numbers of men and women who worked for the giant computer corporation over
the past few decades have been dying prematurely."
So where's my G5? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:So where's my G5? (Score:2)
Very slowly.
Re: So where's my G5? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: So where's my G5? (Score:2)
Non-Registration Link (Score:5, Informative)
yer kidding. . (Score:4, Funny)
at least working in the pr0n industry I'll only go blind. .
industry problem? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:industry problem? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:industry problem? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:industry problem? (Score:2)
Re:industry problem? (Score:2)
Re:industry problem? (Score:2)
Problem? What Problem... move the plant to China (Score:5, Insightful)
What is needed here is both strict safety regulation and a ban or heavy tariff on goods from countries that do not enforce a basic level of similar reguations. This will force IBM and others to clean up their act and prevent them from just transfering the plants overseas.
Re:Problem? What Problem... move the plant to Chin (Score:2, Insightful)
Mod parent up.
It should not be possible to reduce manufacturing costs by offshoring in order to skirt basic workplace safety, child labor, or environmental regulations.
Re:Problem? What Problem... move the plant to Chin (Score:4, Insightful)
I think a stronger case can be made, though: all of these countries which have weak employee protection laws now will get stronger laws and start having retroactive lawsuits (ala tobacco or asbestos) which will probably cost the companies a lot more down the road than it would cost them to avoid those areas now. And I'll bet they're not factoring that risk into their cost analyses.
Re:industry problem? (Score:2)
Re:industry problem? (Score:2)
Chromium and Chromium oxides (Cr3 not Cr6 as in Erin Brockovich but still nasty stuff)
High Strength Acids (Hydrofluoric, Hydrochloric, Acetic)
High Strength Bases (Potassium Hydoxide, Sodium Hydroxide)
wouldn't surprise.. (Score:5, Insightful)
-
In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:wouldn't surprise.. (Score:2, Informative)
On a more general note, I am amazed at the amount of potentially dangerous stuff people expose themselves to on a daily basis because some government think-tank deemed it safe while ignoring the fact that repercussions such as cancer or birth defects are unlikely to show up immediately and may result not from initial exposure but from very long term exposure.
Those depleted Urani
Re:wouldn't surprise.. (Score:2)
Re:wouldn't surprise.. (Score:2)
The health danger is largely from ingestion or inhalation of small particulate uranium resulting from its use. If you get enough of it in your body, it can cause problems.
Same thing in other companies. (Score:5, Interesting)
One had an enlarged liver, another had a nerveous dis-order. There was cancer. I think it stems from an over all lack of knowledge of hazordous chemicals.
When I worked there OSHA (Sp.?) had done a lot to make things better. A LOT of chemicals where removed and cleaned up. I was still nerveous about standing next to a pot of molten solder, etc.
You know you're on Slashdot when... (Score:5, Funny)
You know you're on Slashdot when someone is unsure of the spelling of "OSHA".
Usual Media Hype? (Score:5, Informative)
2 If it is workplace related exposure, then the people exposed to it should generally come down with the SAME TYPE of cancers/diseases(e.g. radium watch makers all came down with bone tumors, aniline dye workers all came down with bladder cancer) . If someone has esophagous cancer (prob from smoking+drinking) and somebody else has a bone tumor and someone else has brain cancer then these things DON'T ADD UP.
We need to see a GOOD epidemiological investigation before IBM is accused of increasing the cancer risk in it's manufacturing divisions. These things are almost always related to
Selection bias [consort-statement.org]
Weird Quote (Score:5, Interesting)
Despite that, I think the employees have a fairly good point. Even if IBM didn't know about the toxic conditions, it was IBM who put the employees there, and they should likely have to deal with the consequences. Its really sad that it had to turn out this way.
Re:Weird Quote (Score:2)
It says he developed cancer in his leg in 1985.
Maybe he did spend some time as a kid selling shoes:
http://www.mtn.org/quack/devices/shoexray.htm [mtn.org]
Re:Weird Quote (Score:3, Insightful)
Are you kidding - back then they practically fed benzene to the chem lab students! Remember - we're talking the 50's and 60's here. It was NOTHING like chemical safety nowadays.
The universities haven't improved all that much since. Industry, on
A shield wouldn't work (Score:2)
There's also the fact that many places just dumped the toxic waste into the ground, which is why many cities in Silicon Valley have questionable water and why a measurable percentage of all California lettuce had some toxins.
Dammit! (Score:3, Funny)
I went to news.google.com to search for the google partner link, but "IBM lawsuit" turned up all this shit about some company called SCO. Who are they, anyway? They say they've got some sort of Unix, but I've never seen or even heard of anyone who runs it.
Must be some two-bit company...wonder why they're getting so much press.
More hazards in IBM cafeteria! (Score:5, Interesting)
okra - sterculic acid (anti-metabolite)
celery - psoralins (light-stimulated carcinogens)
crucifers - goitrin (turns off your thyroid)
litchee - hypoglycin-A (L-a-amino-b-[methylene
cyclopropyl]propionic acid)
peanuts - aflatoxcins (fungal metabolites; hepatic carcinogens)
lima beans - cyanogenic glycosides
carrots - carotatoxin (neurotxin)
mushrooms - hydrazines (carcinogen; holy Alar, Batman!)
tomatoes - tomatine (neurotoxin), quercetin glycosides (carcinogens)
broccoli - benzpyrene (carcinogin), goitrin (shuts down thyroid)
potatoes - solanine (toxin; causes spina bifida), chaconine
(neutrotoxin), isoflavones (estrogens), arsenic
cassava - linamarin (cyanogenic glycoside)
broad bean - vicine (hemolytic)
chick pea - beta-N-oxalylamino-L-alanine (lathyrogenic factor)
fiddlehead - ptaquiloside (leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, hemolysis;
bladder and intestinal carcinogen)
comfrey - pyrrolizidine alkaloids (hepatotoxin)
cabbage - thiocyanates (shuts down thyroid)
spinach - phytanic acid (chelates iron adn zinc - no absorption)
soy - genistin, daidzin, coumesterol (phytoestrogens)
wheat germ - phytoestrogens
nutmeg - myristicin (hallucinogen, spasmodic)
mustard - allyl isothiocyanate (war gas)
alfalfa sprouts - canavanine (arginine mimic; highly toxic to growing
mammals)
Re:More hazards in IBM cafeteria! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:More hazards in IBM cafeteria! (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, but that's exactly what "activists" usually do when they mention chemical products released by industries in the environment. Numbers only confuse the matters when one is trying to prove how evil corporations are.
Re:More hazards in IBM cafeteria! (Score:2)
or eat a pound of nutmeg (myristicin) to get high.
Oddly enough, some sufficiently desperate people actually do eat enough nutmeg to get high! Just another example of the folly of even trying to eliminate all use of intoxicants.
List of chemicals (from memory) (Score:5, Informative)
zylene at Home Depot? (Score:2)
I find that for many purposes, WD-40 [wd40.com] (warning: audio on site) does the same trick, is cheaper, not smelly, and (perhaps?) not as carcinogenic.
The secrets out! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The secrets out! (Score:2)
Holy hyperbole, Statman! (Score:5, Interesting)
"statistical analyses", "troubling elevations", "younger than the U.S. average", "chilling", "sadly", "Incredibly", "More than 200 plaintiffs", "serious illnesses", "vehemently denied"
Phew, with all those emotive phrases, I'm finding that I have strong opinions on this, despite not having access to the data behind the complaint, and not seeing the phrase "standard deviations" appearing once. I guess because IBM are a big company, they must be evil and therefore guilty, except that they're being sued by SCO, so perhaps they're good and therefore innocent.
One thing's for sure though, I'm not going to wait for them to muddy this with boring old "facts" before jumping to my conclusion.
Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! (Score:2)
Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! (Score:2)
Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, in the words of the great philosopher, Sabrina the Teenage Witch: "It's an opinion. You can't retract an opinion!"
Now, what, precisely, is the view or opinion being expressed here? If we're using Op-Ed as a synonym for "unsubstantiated bullshit masquerading as news" then fair enough. But that's not what you described it as.
Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! (Score:2)
No, it is an opinion piece. Editorials are written by, now stay with me here, the editors!
However, it is an opinion piece written by a NYTimes columnist, not an unsolicited submission. This association increases his credibility and therefore gives the NYTimes a greater responsibility to see that he does not fabricate or mislead.
Watch the jobs fly to Vietnam (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Watch the jobs fly to Vietnam (Score:2)
Acutally that's probably unfair. They're outsourcing the jobs to a manufacturing company and getting out of the low-level microelectroncis (read, less profitable) so they can work on processor (G5, Power4+, Power5, etc) design work
First the hard disks, next? (Score:2)
Coincidence?
Statistics don't add up (Score:4, Insightful)
Now, if you can show me a few hundred people with the SAME ailment, you might have something. But this suit is fishing with a gill net.
Re:Statistics don't add up (Score:2)
Depends on the type of sickness. I mean tens of tousands will get sick. most of which will live through it.
Toxic exposure doesn't always cause the same ailment to different people.
I can not speak to the validity of the suit, however, perhaps you should think more before posting.
Re:Statistics don't add up (Score:2)
Granted, I don't have a good historical accounting of how many people worked there throughout history. That sort of minimal research would require me to go back through at least 50 annual reports.
I just wanted you to see the sheer numbers involved.
Re:Statistics don't add up (Score:2)
Yes, of course...you can't dismiss it when thousands of people are showing symptoms of heavy metal toxicity and radiation damage to the lungs. You can't dismiss it as "Well, some people get sick. It's a fluke." or "They are making it up to defraud us out of money. You're not really dead! GET UP!" Just like you can't dismiss the fact that these people have heavy levels of toxic heavy metals in their blood, lungs, and sometimes even semen. "Well...who knows how that got there...Besides, its not danger
More Fuzzy Math (Score:5, Insightful)
This is statistical hogwash. You can't take a sample like "all IBM employees" and compare it to "all the people in the United States." Analysis needs to be tuned to a population that has a similar demographic. Age, geography, economic background, pollution, family history, smoking, and even diet affect cancer rates tremendously.
Fuzzy Math - How about just ignoring science (Score:2, Interesting)
And in my case, that was one cause that was totally eliminated, due to lack of exposure.
One the other causes listed was STRESS!
Ages younger than the US average - try 36 for me. But how about sitting next to a kid in the waiting room, who at 17 was one his second go round for cancer?
This sounds more like lawyers trolling for dol
Re:More Fuzzy Math (Score:2, Informative)
We're not talking about a small age difference here. Quote:
People dying of cancer in their thirties i
Re:More Fuzzy Math (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:More Fuzzy Math (Score:2)
As for your other post [slashdot.org], the defendants are presumably dealing with similar ailments with the same cause. Moreove
Re:More Fuzzy Math (Score:2)
Re:More Fuzzy Math (Score:2)
One would find Wheat farmers are far more prone to melanoma. And we all know wheat is very dangerous stuff.
workers fault ?? (Score:2, Insightful)
All the time I see people breathing fumes, will they one day turn around and sue ?? Probably. People are trained, equipment is offered free, people ignore the rules, people sue.
Re:workers fault ?? (Score:2)
But it's true that if such procedures did exist as they do now, then there's no case: nobody can prevent you from hurting yourself if you want to, and refusing to follow safety procedures is a concious acceptance of that risk.
Re:workers fault ?? (Score:3, Interesting)
OTOH, I am not a sue-happy type person - I think most of the produ
Of course we don't want to hear this. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I do want to hear this (Score:2)
POWER kills (Score:2)
Pick your poison (Score:5, Funny)
Go into software, die from a Doritos or Mountain Dew overdose.
Either way, you're screwed
Strange headline (Score:3, Funny)
Overclocking humans.. (Score:3, Interesting)
I guess this is what happens when IBM tries to overclock humans.. halfs their lifetimes..
-- Jim
environment suits (Score:2)
Re:environment suits (Score:2, Informative)
As for environmental suits. These are really just coveralls for "high tech" workers made of a thin nylon. The "bunny suits" are meant to prevent things like hair and flakes of skin floating around in the air. People are the single biggest source for particlulate contamination in any fab.
The "bunny suits" protect the wafers from the people, they are not meant to protect the workers from hazards
Caution: This is Op-Ed (Score:2, Informative)
It's perhaps true of the whole early industry (Score:4, Insightful)
At that time, the long-term dangers of those chemicals were not appreciated. However, can they clearly pin it on the IBM process lines? How about the Reynold's plant, auto body shops, plating factories, and the rest fo the crap that was being dumped into the Silicon Valley air, dirt and water?
This country like lawsuites far to much! (Score:2, Insightful)
Was the company reasonably able to know the danger and effects of the chemicals within a given environment?
Were the employee's reasonably able to know the danger and effects of the chemicals within a given environment?
I do not agree with lawsuits against companies because we later find that a given environment wasn't as safe as we once thought. If we suddenly find that some specific type of blue paint causes skin conditions after it has been used for twenty years is it reasonable for
Re:This country like lawsuites far to much! (Score:3, Informative)
That's my opinion. My other opinion is they if IBM did know, and didn't tell the workers, the people responsible should face jail time for criminal negligence. But that could never happen because in the US, corporations are people, and since it was the corporation that did it, only the corporation can be charged with anything. Yay!
Re:This country like lawsuites far to much! (Score:2, Informative)
This is where I tend to disagree with people. I believe that people need to take responsibility for there own actions and companies cannot be held responsible for all the worlds' ills. IBM may have had a harmful environment and they may have paid people to enter into that harmful environment. They did not force anyone. Anyone who entered into that environment did so of there own free will and was paid to do s
Re:This country like lawsuites far too much! (Score:2, Insightful)
Everything that you do involves risk. Apparently for you, this means that the risk is shifted to the employee when things go badly, but stay with the company when things go well (as the company keeps the reward associated with the risk).
Dateline Interview (Score:3, Informative)
A group of IBM fab workers (presumably the same group) made an appearance on NBC's Dateline to discuss this very issue five years ago. Here's a transcript [svtc.org].
Recent news... (Score:2)
I love this: (Score:4, Interesting)
This show's they are after money, and not information. IBM bought these chemicals.... why is it the fault of the company that sold them to them?
Re:I love this: (Score:2)
Of course they're after money! What do you think they're filing a lawsuit for--IBM to use their time-mahcine to go back and undo the exposure?
Nearly every lawsuit filed in the US is a damaged party seeking monies in compenstion for their damage. Many times this is just "to pay the bills".
NY Times alert: (Score:2)
I Worked at IBM East Fishkill (Score:3, Interesting)
I didn't work in a clean room, although I spent my 12 months there slicing silicon wafers and then bathing them in a solvent (do not remember exactly what it was) that dissolved the bond between each wafer and a strip of caulk. The protection I was given was for my eyes (goggles) and hands (rubber gloves).
I do remember that my lungs would burn after shifts, particularly by the end of the week. I don't have cancer, yet, but I do have diminished lung capacity and chronic bronchitus now. Are they fallout from my stint at IBM? Possibly. Doctors always ask me if I smoke (never have) when they give me lung capacity tests and get back these crappy results.
Do I suspect I was taken advantage of? Again, possibly, but you need to understand that at the time it was a big deal to get any job at IBM in Duchess county. Seven dollars an hour was considered a king's ransom since just about all the other work available was for minimum wage. All of the contractors I worked with applied to become full-time employees, and a "lucky" few were accepted when their temp stints ran out. Hopefully, since I wasn't one of the "lucky" ones, I'll be one of the truly lucky ones that doesn't develop a serious illness from my time spent there.
Overall I'm a little worried but as I said, I don't have cancer yet and I take care of my health. I feel bad for my co-workers who are very sick now or who have died. There were a lot of good people working there and I think IBM is no different than any other large corporation in the borderline craven way they put profits above all other considerations.
Be careful out there, is all I can say.
Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition: IBM is Okay (Score:3, Interesting)
Justice does not stop there. Since we require American companies like IBM to abide by stringent environmental and work regulations that protect both the environment and American workers, we must also require foreign companies like Acer from Taiwan province (located in China) to abide by the same stringent environmental and work regulations. Otherwise, IBM will be at a competitive disadvantage against companies like Acer. Acer products are cheaper than IBM products simply because Acer does not pay the cost of protecting the environment or the employees.
At the same time, non-Westerners like the Koreans and the Chinese simply do the care about the environment or the health of employees. Please read the environmental report card [svtc.org] produced by the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition [svtc.org]. All the Taiwanese and Korean companies received a failing grade on the issue of poisoning both the environment and their workers.
How can Westerners force non-Westerners like the Taiwanese and Koreans to enact and to enforce the same stringent environmental and work regulations that Westerners apply to Western companies like IBM? Simple. We boycott products made by Taiwanese or Korean companies. Please remember that when you buy products make in a particular country, you effectively support the value system in that country. Do not buy products made in either China or Korea.
If you have qualms about this boycott, please re-read the environmental report card [svtc.org] produced by the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition [svtc.org].
Re:IBM will most likely stall them (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Why (Score:5, Insightful)
B) Powerful solvents are rarely good for you. Same for heavy metals.
C) Not everyone read MSDS like they should.
D) Proper saftey gear can be very uncomfortable and unwieldy, esspecially if it's fitted correctly. (I fog up goggles like you can't believe, even when I put anti-fog crap in them.)
E) Stress can accelerate cancer.
Re:Why (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't think MSDS rules existed in the time period they're talking about (mid-60's to late 70's).
Mandatory access to MSDS is relatively recent. A quick web search indicates that the OSHA "Hazard Communication" law came into effect in 1983.
Re:Why (Score:3, Interesting)
No health problems yet (10 years later) but I'll always wonder...
re; d (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=UTF- 8&oe=UTF-8&q=spit+goggles
Re:re; d (Score:2)
For goodness sake, if you are going to post a comment like this PLEASE QUOTE THE PARENT!
I read the parent and went back to make sure this was talking about what I thought it was.
My EE transistors teacher spilled HF on his hands. (Score:3, Interesting)
Hydrogen Fluoride supposedly passes right through your skin and attacks your bones. He had an interesting trip to the emergency room.
Semiconductor work involves some severely toxic chemicals - arsenic is used both as a dopant and a substrate, for example. Imagine an accidental release of a cloud of it from a CVD process.
While semiconductor work can be especially dangerous, I've heard that chemical engineers in general have low life expectancies because of constant exposure to toxic materials (a good rea
Re:My EE transistors teacher spilled HF on his han (Score:2, Funny)
Not only does HF pass through your skin and attack the bones, you don't even feel it (other than as a wet spot) until it reaches the bones. By then you're in a whole lotta trouble, prompt pre-feeling treatment is necessary.
The treatment is to soak/rinse the affected area in a mix of ethanol and water.
They also had the anecdote about a guy who got some on his pants, and exposed a rather large area. He had to sit in a tub
Re:My EE transistors teacher spilled HF on his han (Score:2)
The fluorine ions go right through the skin and eat the calcium in the bones. And one doesn't notice the reaction (unless it's high concentration HF) until hours later. Besides dissolving bones, the fluorine ions attac
Re:My EE transistors teacher spilled HF on his han (Score:2)
Yes, this is true, but I believe the real danger lies in that the F- ions in your bloodstream scavenge Ca2+ ions. Since your body relies on ion concentration gradients for signal transmission across cell membranes and such, this is a Bad Thing. It eventually interferes with cardiac function.
Spilling HF on your hand is not bad because it will destroy your hand, but because it can kill you.
Re:Why (Score:2)
>crap in them.)
I worked a college summer at a rubber factory running a steam press. Every day they'd bring around two pairs of gloves for each of us. One pair for handling the molds and pulling the parts out/off, and one pair for handling the metal inserts that went into the mold as a component of the next batch of product.
Doing your j
Re:Why (Score:2, Insightful)
But I've gotta imagine if I somehow managed to shatter a jug of 1 Ph HCl it wouldn't take long for the fumes to mess me up. I always tried to closely follow standards, but even at a university, there were
Re:not genuine, better read it yourself (Score:2)
Informative? Informative?
What are these moderators smoking?
Whoever modded that Inform
Re:not genuine, better read it yourself (Score:2)
-- james
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:2)
Semicon d u c tor
So if you rearrange the letters
you get microsodct
now d is the 4th letter in the alphabet and c is the third. So we can add 4+3 and we get 7. So we take the D and we make its 7th cord (in music) which is D F# A C#. So now we we resee that c their but it is now sharp. But so is the F# so we have to conclude that the DC actually means F. Especially since Microsoft made a language called C# and they are working on a language called F#
So we get Microsoft
No
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:2)
Darl! Daaaaaaaaaaarl!!
Re:Ignorance is bliss (Score:2)
McDonalds is personally responsible for what you choose to consume! They are also responsible for you being an idiot and spilling coffee on yourself because the cup doesnt say "warning hot" (previous lawsuit won by that woman)
Tobacco companies are supposed to be paying billions for healthcare companines, who knew that putting something in your mouth and burning it and sucking it into your lungs would hurt you!
Apparently common sense is a thing of the past. I personally dont try to
Re:MSDS (Score:2)
Anyway, when was the last time you knew anyone in IT who quit their job because of exposure to toner powder. Yeah, it's supposed to be safe but that's only if it doesn't become airborne. Yeah, printer cartridges never break and those HEPA filters on the vacuum cleaners are always properly mainta