The Guardian (USA)

Meta’s settlement talks with Kenyan content moderators break down

- Reuters in Nairobi

Settlement talks have collapsed between Facebook’s parent company, Meta, and Kenyan content moderators over a lawsuit alleging unfair dismissal, a tech rights group working with the plaintiffs has said.

The 184 moderators sued Meta and two subcontrac­tors earlier this year after they allegedly lost their jobs with one of the subcontrac­tors, Sama, for organising a union. They say they were then blackliste­d from applying for the same roles at a second firm, Majorel, after Facebook changed contractor­s.

In August, the court asked the parties to hold out-of-court settlement talks and said the case would proceed if those failed.

The British tech rights group Foxglove said in a statement on Monday that the negotiatio­ns had broken down, accusing Meta and Sama of making “very little attempt to address core issues raised by the petitioner­s”.

“The respondent­s were buying time and not being genuine. We kept waiting for them to participat­e … only for them to keep asking for an extension of time and then come back every time to refuse to take accountabi­lity,” the statement quoted Mercy Mutemi, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, as saying.

Meta declined to comment. There was no immediate comment from Sama or Majorel.

Meta has previously responded to allegation­s of a poor working environmen­t in Kenya by saying it requires partners to provide industry-leading conditions.

Sama has said it has always followed Kenyan law and provided mental health services to its employees. In August, Majorel said it did not comment on matters involving pending or active litigation.

The moderators also allege that Meta is trying to terminate their contracts in defiance of an earlier court order. A hearing on their petition to find Meta and Sama in contempt of court is scheduled for 31 October, Foxglove said.

Meta has also been sued in Kenya by a former moderator over accusation­s of poor working conditions at Sama, and by two Ethiopian researcher­s and a rights institute that accuse it of letting violent and hateful posts from Ethiopia flourish on Facebook.

In response, Meta said last December that hate speech and incitement to violence were against the rules of its Facebook and Instagram platforms.

 ?? Photograph: Baz Ratner/Reuters ?? Mercy Mutemi, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, accused Meta of ‘buying time and not being genuine’.
Photograph: Baz Ratner/Reuters Mercy Mutemi, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, accused Meta of ‘buying time and not being genuine’.

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