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Semiconductor Employees Suing IBM

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."

273 comments

  1. Why by dhawton · · Score: 0

    My first question is why did they allow this to happen?

    1. Re:Why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ask that to the Nazis. Remember kids : a world without SCO would be nice, but a world without SCO nor IBM would be even better.

    2. Re:Why by Kibo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A) Can't always stop it.
      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.

      --
      --Jimmy has fancy plans; and pants to match.
    3. Re:Why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "(I fog up goggles like you can't believe, even when I put anti-fog crap in them.)"


      Have you tried saliva? It's the best anti-fogging solution that I know of.

    4. Re:Why by jridley · · Score: 3, Insightful

      C) Not everyone read MSDS like they should.
      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.

    5. Re:Why by Kibo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, that works for swim goggles for me, but not my lab goggles. It was a problem in college when I had to use HF. That always made me a just little nervous. (I'm also kinda clumsy) It is surprising how blasie one can become around horrible chemicals. HF was the only one that kept making me nervous.

      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 rules, and practices. It wasn't uncommon to see unlabled beakers with a sign that just said don't touch, and some illegible initials. I can't imagine what the standards might fall to in an enviroment where everyone knows each other, and many have been doing this for decade+ after they got comfortable with "Don't Touch" and "Mine".

      I don't even know if Osha can solve stuff like that. No one hated Osha more than the insturment makers. They had giant posters ridiculing osha policies (the Osha version of a Cowboy comes to mind). They knew what they were doing, and like the way they did it. (It's worth noting these guys weren't shop teachers. They'd been doing it more, better, longer, and had all their fingers.)

      --
      --Jimmy has fancy plans; and pants to match.
    6. Re:Why by Halo- · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And the "can't happen to me" and "just a little won't hurt" mentalities build up too. When I was in high school I had a job cleaning environmental air samplers. I don't want to think about how much hexane I inhaled in those 4 years. I finally jury-rigged a vent hood out of a cardboard box and a box fan.

      No health problems yet (10 years later) but I'll always wonder...

    7. Re:Why by Kibo · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but how many people actually make use of that even now? Before MSDS they could still look up toxicity, it was much more difficult of course, but if you don't know what it does, but it's a solvent or heavy metal, seems like it'd be worth looking into. I'm not even guessing at the ignorance, my money is big on the apathy.

      --
      --Jimmy has fancy plans; and pants to match.
    8. Re:Why by dpilot · · Score: 1

      >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.)

      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 job well depended on quickly changing gloves, so everybody cut their gloves, some more than others. I pretty much stuck to slits up the back of the hand, some also cut the cuffs off. Of course this reduces the protection available. That summer I always had burns somewhere on my arms or hands.

      >C) Not everyone read MSDS like they should.

      At the rubber factory, there was no discussion whatsoever of hazardous chemicals. My aunt worked in the same factory in the area where they dipped the aforementioned metal inserts in a special paint. She later had a bout of cancer. Related, or ordinary statistics.

      My father worked in PVC, and was down in the bins cleaning them out before anyone required even a breath mask. He later had a bout with cancer. Statistics? How about adding that many workers from his area had similar cancers? (Don't have statistics handy.)

      IMHO, after WWII we began an infatuation with all things modern, including chemicals. It is understandable that companies may not have taken proper precautions initially. My irritation comes in two specifics:
      1: "We" didn't know what the risks were at first, but now that we know, we're making too much money and it's too expensive to fix things.
      2: Of course it's bad, but if "we" fix things, then we'll be admitting we knew it's bad, and then we'll be open to lawsuits. Better to continue denial and "ignorance."

      >A) Can't always stop it.

      Oh, I also did summer work on farms. Now you want to talk about HAZARDOUS!

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  2. IBM will most likely stall them by vudufixit · · Score: 0, Troll

    In hopes they'll expire before the
    suit is concluded.

    1. Re:IBM will most likely stall them by garcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I know you are trolling, but I doubt that would matter in this case. The families of the victims would receive the compensation (as they would still have to assume the debt due to the high cost of medical bills, funeral arrangements, etc)

    2. Re:IBM will most likely stall them by Peartree · · Score: 1

      Not stalled, but it'll probably be tied up in mass tort litigation for years like Silica, Asbestos, Manganese, etc.

    3. Re:IBM will most likely stall them by Hatechall · · Score: 1

      If I had points you'd be getting them. +1 FUNNY!

    4. Re:IBM will most likely stall them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In spite of your claims the stall does work... how many widows/widowers and children will keep up the fight for 20 years?

    5. Re:IBM will most likely stall them by HBI · · Score: 1

      Actually you pay out less for a death than you do for a chronic incurable condition like brain trauma, or a lengthy battle with cancer. Therefore, IBM would in fact be well advised to delay things as much as possible. In any event, it is standard procedure when settling large, intractable claims.

      People have a fixed value from a claims perspective - I might be worth $2 million because I have children and they will take into account my future earnings and the impact on the kids' lives if I die. If you are single and unmarried, you might be worth as little as $50k because no one is dependent on your income besides you. This is all, of course, based on your value to your surviving family.

      It is a very cold measure of human worth, but it is a very real one.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
  3. So where's my G5? by Bones3D_mac · · Score: 2, Funny

    I've been dying to get one as just as long as you've been dying to make them!

    --


    8==8 Bones 8==8
    1. Re:So where's my G5? by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      I've been dying to get one as just as long as you've been dying to make them!

      Very slowly.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    2. Re:So where's my G5? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So could Moore's Law apply to life expectancy as well?

    3. Re: So where's my G5? by invi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ok, I'm not going to discuss wheter or not the above comment is funny by any definition. The point is that people have been and still are dying. Marking a comment making fun of these facts as +5 funny is just *plain* stupid.

    4. Re: So where's my G5? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It _was_ a funny comment. I'm sorry you take death so seriously.

    5. Re: So where's my G5? by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 1

      Funny isn't determined by whether something is "appropriate" or not. It's based solely on the reaction of people to the joke/situation/whatever. Some of us think that finding humor in a generally depressing world is good. Just because your sense of humor is different does not make us wrong.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    6. Re:So where's my G5? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not Funny. That's just poor taste bud.

    7. Re: So where's my G5? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to note, it's not so much about taking death seriously. I don't (my own at least) but there's a difference between that and being mortified when someone profits by causing someone else pain, sickness and death, and then refuses to take responsibility for it. That's why some people don't find the jokes funny.

      Those who do are often laughing at the horrible state of affairs in the world that not only permits but encourages such behaviour (these were educated Americans - care to wager what semiconductor manufacturing is like in a SE Asian export processing zone?). That's kind of sad too, because underneath the humor there's real despair - you laugh at inequity when you figure you can't ever do anything about it.

      So I thought it was a funny joke, yeah. The part that mortifies me isn't that I'm able to laugh at such a thing, but that I'm pretty much required to in order to stay sane.

    8. Re: So where's my G5? by EvilAlien · · Score: 1
      No it's not.

      That has absolutely nothing to do with stupidity. It may have something to do with insensitivity, callousness, or other social factors, but it certainly has nothing to do with stupidity. I would argue that carelessly attaching value judgements like you've done here is much closer to stupidity than the behavior you are complaining about.

      --
      perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5, (41*2), sqrt(7056), (unpack(c,H)-2), oct(115), 10)'
  4. Non-Registration Link by sparkhead · · Score: 5, Informative
    1. Re:Non-Registration Link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...and other serious illnesses from chemicals they were exposed to in semiconductor and disk-drive manufacturing, laboratory work and other very basic industrial operations."

      i had no idea disk-drive and semiconductor manufacturing was basic, i would hate to see what they call space shuttle construction!

  5. yer kidding. . by NetMagi · · Score: 4, Funny

    and I was always jealous of everyone with an "IBM" job. .

    at least working in the pr0n industry I'll only go blind. .

    1. Re:yer kidding. . by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 0

      That depends which side of the camera you're on.

      --
      Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
    2. Re:yer kidding. . by Chris_Stankowitz · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Don't forget the hairy palm syndrome.

    3. Re:yer kidding. . by lildogie · · Score: 1

      > at least working in the pr0n industry I'll only go blind.

      Now, in that industry, considering the constant occupational exposures, is blindness an asset or a handicap?

  6. industry problem? by n0mad6 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does anyone know of exposure to harmful substances in other companies that do similar manufacturing? I mean, surely, IBM does not have dramatically different methods of manufacturing hard drives and semiconductors from the rest of the industry.

    1. Re:industry problem? by nomadic · · Score: 4, Informative

      For a while the company WAS the industry. Not too many computer manufacturing companies that have been around long enough to show these statistics.

    2. Re:industry problem? by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They use the same stuff as everyone else. To tell you the truth though, having WORKED in semiconductors, you are exposed to a lot more nasty stuff in an auto-body shop. That's not to say a lot of the chemicals aren't nasty, but it's generally in a controlled environment. You can't just slop chemicals around and expect to etch circuitry a few angstroms wide.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    3. Re:industry problem? by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      I was looking around for an article I read a few years ago, I thought in one of the valley papers, but stumbled on this , which seemed to cover the same points and might have just been republished out there. You might also want to take a look at this from the EPA.

    4. Re:industry problem? by canajin56 · · Score: 1

      One of my proff's sister worked for Intel. She wanted to have a baby. They told her she had to stop working on chips for at least 18 months before getting pregenant. I don't know much about an autobody shop...but do they wear bunny suits? And are they not allowed to have children?

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    5. Re:industry problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is a female doing in semiconductor plants?

    6. Re:industry problem? by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1

      It was corporate CYA.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    7. Re:industry problem? by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1
      The short list:

      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)

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    8. Re:industry problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      National Semiconductor, in Santa Clara, California, did/does the same manufacturing.

      Son born with congenital birth defects, although correlation with working in a wafer fab environment would be difficult to pin down. Daughter came out perfect, though.

      This was back in the late 1970s/early 1980s.

    9. Re:industry problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why on earth did she tell Intel she was going to have a baby? Man, some women are crazy.

    10. Re:industry problem? by wass · · Score: 1
      I have also worked in both auto repair garages and semiconductor labs, and I'm not sure which chemical agents the original poster was referring to as being worse in the auto repair world. Well, there is asbestos dust in brakes, and perhaps some solvents like brake cleaner and bad things in used motor oil. I once saw a leaking lead-acid battery, and once a battery blew up when a guy was charing it (had no liquid to spew out as it blew up, which was why it blew up in the first place). But I don't think that's nearly as bad as HF or arsine gas.

      The difference is that in an autoshop it's really easily to spill hot motor oil on yourself, burn your hands trying to get off an oil filter just beyond a piping-hot exhaust system, skin your knuckles pulling a bolt loose too quickly, etc. In a lab you've got gloves and are working in a hood. But the MSDS's for the chemicals involved are certainly much nastier in semiconductor fabrication.

      Anyway, the bunny suits aren't for protecting the worker, but opposite - for protecting the cleanroom FROM the worker. In a clean room you've got to cut the particle count down dramatically, which comes from clothing, shoes, etc. In a decent cleanroom things like regular paper aren't allowed, for instance (there is special cleanroom notebook paper).

      --

      make world, not war

    11. Re:industry problem? by TheClam · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure none of those will give you brain cancer. Definitely not acids or bases of any strength.

      IAAC(hemist).

    12. Re:industry problem? by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      Anyway, the bunny suits aren't for protecting the worker, but opposite - for protecting the cleanroom FROM the worker. In a clean room you've got to cut the particle count down dramatically, which comes from clothing, shoes, etc. In a decent cleanroom things like regular paper aren't allowed, for instance (there is special cleanroom notebook paper).

      Ah, the blue paper. :-) I've spent more time than I care to in IBM's mask shop at the Vermont facility, and it totally amazed me that they have a restroom right there adjacent to the mask shop itself - you go out the doors, and right into the men's room. No extra filtration, nothing. You change your gloves 'fore coming back in, and of course the mask shop has positive pressure, but no other safeguards against particulates between the toilets and the work area. Compare that to the mask shop at Infineon in Munich, where going to the bathroom was a 15-minute operation just to get to the restrooms themselves, and then you had to get a completely different bunny suit to go back in. Intel and Conexant were similar.

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
    13. Re:industry problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      __ __ ___ _ ______
      \ v. v / | (_-<_-<
      .\_/\_/\___/__/__/
  7. wouldn't surprise.. by gl4ss · · Score: 4, Insightful

    after all, semiconductor industry isn't _that_ old (few _decades_) and generally usage of chemicals a few decades ago wasn't often so well thought and their long term effects weren't usually that well laid out in ANY industry. and even more common is that employees in those old times didn't care themselfs at all about protection("what, i can't see it it cant hurt me don't tell me boy how to do this i've been doing this for 30 years") and general awareness about such things wasn't exactly stellar.

    -

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    1. Re:wouldn't surprise.. by brlancer · · Score: 2, Informative
      semiconductor industry isn't _that_ old (few _decades_)...long term effects weren't usually that well laid out in ANY industry.

      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 Uranium shells we used in Iraq in '91 weren't dangerous, and there's no reason to think that depleted Uranium could be causing the high rate of cancer and birth defects seen in Gulf War vets. The government said it was safe...

      Think about how many chemicals have been added to foods, medicine, even clothing in the last 25 or 50 years; we're only now starting to see long term effects from that. This IBM case isn't isolated, it's just a very large and visible company so the footprint is more obvious.

      --
      Someone asked if I had patched against MSBlast; I said yes, I installed Linux.
    2. Re:wouldn't surprise.. by Brendan+Byrd · · Score: 1

      Depleted Uranium are called "depleted" because they have been depleted of radioactivity. Thus, they are inert, and non-radioactive. Depleted Uranium is just a metal. I wouldn't recommending eating the stuff, but for the purpose of what it does, it's safe. (If you call a huge bullet hitting the side of a tank "safe", of course...)

    3. Re:wouldn't surprise.. by mkldev · · Score: 1
      You can't just "deplete" something of radioactivity. It is called that because most of the gamma-radiation-generating materials have been leached out for use in weapons or fuel rods. That doesn't mean it isn't radioactive. It's just less radioactive than unprocessed uranium out of the ground.

      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.

      --
      120 character sigs suck. Make it 250.
    4. Re:wouldn't surprise.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's only relatively depleted - basically it's no longer "enriched" enough to serve as fuel in a nuclear reactor. It's still certainly radioactive, because if it wasn't it wouldn't be uranium. There are no non-radioactive isotopes of uranium, period. Furthermore, many of the other element isotopes present in the decay chain from the uranium have much shorter half-lives and are thus much more dangerous to be around (shorter half-life == more radiation over a time period). The type of radiation is also a factor in that (gamma radiation being generally much worse to be around than alpha or beta particles). But the main point is that you can no more have uranium that's "just a metal" (ie. nonradioactive) than radon that's "just a gas".

      I don't blame you for misunderstanding this, because the military's use of the term "depleted" is misleading. They didn't actually create the term (it's called that because the main source is spent reactor fuel - again "spent" just means insufficientally energetic to create a chain reaction, not safe), but they've sure allowed people to believe it indicates an absolute condition, rather than a relative one. If depleted uranium weren't being used to make shells, it would be classified as dangerous waste.

    5. Re:wouldn't surprise.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You dumb shit. The tiny amount of radioactive material in my fire alarm is more radioactive than a round of DU ammo.

      For that matter, so is the sidewalk in front of my house.

    6. Re:wouldn't surprise.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why the piece of Americium in your smoke alarm is so tiny. It's also alpha-emitting, and produces no gamma radiation.

      As for your sidewalk, it's only radioactive if it has naturally occuring uranium in the gravel. It probably does, but then it's basically at the level of U-238 (aka depleted uranium), because there's so little U-235 (aka enriched uranium) in natural uranium.

      Either way, it's a question of how much material. A concentrated mass of pure uranium metal (even U-238) is a hell of a lot more dangerous than even a pure granite sidewalk. And that's without getting into the shorter lived decay products of U-238 - thorium and such that cause more trouble on the way to the relatively stable (but still gamma-emitting and substantially dangerous if you're in an armory of it) U-234.

      So maybe I am a dumb shit, but you're talking through your hat.

  8. not genuine, better read it yourself by mirko · · Score: 1, Informative

    Expected troll inside...

    Four of the 40 lawsuits in San Jose are due to go to trial next month. All the suits are being watched extremely closely by the semiconductor industry, which had been warned for years that chip-making and other processes requiring the use of tremendous amounts of toxic chemicals (such as Rob Malda's manseeking semen) might be associated with cancers, miscarriages, birth defects and other very serious health problems.

    --
    Trolling using another account since 2005.
    1. Re:not genuine, better read it yourself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But was that a +5 informative, funny troll? no. YOU FAIL IT!!!

    2. Re:not genuine, better read it yourself by hype7 · · Score: 1
      Four of the 40 lawsuits in San Jose are due to go to trial next month. All the suits are being watched extremely closely by the semiconductor industry, which had been warned for years that chip-making and other processes requiring the use of tremendous amounts of toxic chemicals (such as Rob Malda's manseeking semen) might be associated with cancers, miscarriages, birth defects and other very serious health problems.


      Informative? Informative?

      What are these moderators smoking?

      Whoever modded that Informative - I have some bad news for you. Unfortunately, your own moderation is unable to get modded +1, Funny.

      Sorry. No karma for you.

      -- james
    3. Re:not genuine, better read it yourself by hype7 · · Score: 1

      oops, my bad. I now realise that a parent troll was trying to have a laugh at our expense

      -- james

    4. Re:not genuine, better read it yourself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, he is excellent. Providing us with all the laughs!

    5. Re:not genuine, better read it yourself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You idiot.

      Anyway, it was informative. It just happened to be a funny troll too.

    6. Re:not genuine, better read it yourself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      plonk? what's that mean?

  9. Same thing in other companies. by thbigr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Whe I worked as a software Engineer for a small manufacturing company, many of the Electrical Engineers had many many problems relating to exposure to chemicals.

    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.

    --
    Come the revolution, the Bourgeois, Capitalistic, "A PARKING STICKER HOLDERS", will be first against the wall!
  10. Re:So what? by NetMagi · · Score: 0, Troll

    get back to work!. . if you don't finish bringing hitler back up from hell I sware to god I'm going to have your job!

  11. Hey... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Illness? Death? Of others...? It's a small price to pay when you need vacation home improvements or a new sport 'ute.

  12. Weird Quote by Thomas+M+Hughes · · Score: 5, Interesting
    "If we'd known all this from the beginning," he said, "we'd never have gone to work for I.B.M. We'd all have become shoe salesmen or something."
    This seems like an odd statement to me. I mean, if I had found out that I had gone to school for 4-12 years, and that my chosen field would involve toxic materials, I likely would have said "Hey, can I get some safety equipment to shield me from this stuff? Maybe some gloves and some lead garments?" not "Ah, well...I think its time to go sell women's shoes."

    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.
    1. Re:Weird Quote by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      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

    2. Re:Weird Quote by Ro'que · · Score: 1

      If you worked for IBM in the early 80s, I don't think selling women's shoes would be that far off. I'm sure a lot of the engineers wore women's shoes to work....You think us IT guys are nerds now, let's take a look into the magical past to see some really odd people.

    3. Re:Weird Quote by Rich0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I mean, if I had found out that I had gone to school for 4-12 years, and that my chosen field would involve toxic materials, I likely would have said "Hey, can I get some safety equipment to shield me from this stuff? Maybe some gloves and some lead garments?"

      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 the other hand, has for the most part - the result of the threat of HUGE lawsuits.

      It doesn't surprise me IBM had these kinds of conditions back then - everybody did.

    4. Re:Weird Quote by Bob+Uhl · · Score: 1
      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.

      The employees chose to work at the occupation. If IBM didn't know about the risks, and they didn't know about the risks, how is the corporation any more to blame than they are? Why should it be held at fault for something it had no knowledge of? That's like blaming a homeowner because, while away on vacation, his kids threw a party.

      Note: I am an IBM employee and stockholder, but naturally my opinions are not those of the IBM Corporation, its officers &c. Nor would they be different if another corporation were concerned (even SCO: let the bastards be blamed for what is their fault, not what's not).

  13. Dammit! by SuperBanana · · 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.

  14. sco by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Blame it on SCO, afterall they own everything that somehow at some point touched Unix, I bet those semiconductors did.

  15. Re:Don't want to register? ARTICLE TEXT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If this occured in the Valley, what's the chance that other/similar manufacturing sites were to blame? I thought I've read articles claiming that the groundwater in that area isn't all that clean after decades of such work?

    As other posters have written, there have been other large companies doing this for years, do they show similar statistics? And IBM might have actually been a "proper employer" - following all published guidelinds (OHSA and before) to the letter. One can't protect against problems which aren't known at the time...

  16. Wait a minute... by ThyTurkeyIsDone · · Score: 1, Funny
    SemiCOnductor employees, huh?

    ...Coincidence? I think not.

    1. Re:Wait a minute... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Silence, fool.

    2. Re:Wait a minute... by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Well with that crap reasoning.
      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

      Now for the letters enu. If we rearrange them we get NEU which is a French Word and France is apart of Europe and the EU which Microsoft is against. Now the N EU means No European Union which furthers the proof.

      My point is "coincidence? Yea that is what a coincidence is!" If you stretch anything then you get what you want out of it.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    3. Re:Wait a minute... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that 'Neu' is a German word ;-)

    4. Re:Wait a minute... by peterprior · · Score: 1

      I know... just wait until Linux kernel programmers start dying prematurely.

      Darl! Daaaaaaaaaaarl!!

    5. Re:Wait a minute... by ThyTurkeyIsDone · · Score: 1

      Our word for today is intertextuality. For someone with a userid almost 600.000 below mine, you seem strangely unfamiliar with the expression "Coincidence? I think not." and what it implies about the intended meaning of an article on Slashdot.

      Or, to put it another way:

      Me: Horse walks into a bar, barman says: "Why the long face?"
      You: Your story is crap! Horses don't usually just run around in urban areas and walk into bars as they please! And any reasonably educated barman wouldn't assume that they can just initiate a normal conversation with a herbivorous quadruped!

      Or, to put it another way: Consider your parent a Turing test. You just failed.

  17. More hazards in IBM cafeteria! by mc6809e · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Original found on Usenet.

    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)

    1. Re:More hazards in IBM cafeteria! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting list. You forget that the amount of the substance matters too.

      You're not going to see anyone start chemical warfare with Dion mustard (allyl isothiocyanate), or eat a pound of nutmeg (myristicin) to get high.

    2. Re:More hazards in IBM cafeteria! by mangu · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You forget that the amount of the substance matters too.


      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.

    3. Re:More hazards in IBM cafeteria! by sjames · · Score: 1

      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.

    4. Re:More hazards in IBM cafeteria! by pmz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, I'll still eat these things, as most of them have been nutritious staple foods for centuries. Sure, things like tomatoes and potatoes have been contriversial off and on, but I don't see the Italians and Irish dropping like flies. Perhaps, just perhaps, eating a potato is less dangerous than eating nothing at all?

    5. Re:More hazards in IBM cafeteria! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow.

      Coke - asdfqwerty acid
      Pepsi - pdqdeathtoxin

    6. Re:More hazards in IBM cafeteria! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I never went for all those nightshade plants - tomatoes, potatoes, tobaccoes, eggplant (other kind of Indians that last, but I don't trust any of them). That's what I told Wally Raleigh and I'm sticking to my guns.

      On the other hand, I'm much more worried about the dihydrogen monoxide issue.

    7. Re:More hazards in IBM cafeteria! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Morning Glory seeds are another one. It's an invasive urban weed, so not hard to find (though it curiously doesn't go to seed very often).

      Note that these hallucinogens will make you feel rather icky for quite a long time. You could also use belladonna, but you probably shouldn't. Get some psilocybin mushrooms, peyote cactus, or plain old LSD and you'll be much happier. Or at least less wretched.

    8. Re:More hazards in IBM cafeteria! by sjames · · Score: 1

      All very true. Based on the descriptions from those who have tried nutmeg and morning glory, I don't think it would be worth it.

      Belladonna is more of a deleriant and is much too lethal to be a good choice.

      Personally, I use <plug type=shameless>Autozen</plug> Not very visual, but certainly interesting, and they can't very well ban a sound.

  18. same thing happened at NiGas, Naperville, IL by garysears · · Score: 1

    everyone in the lab started dying of brain cancer at a rate that would make any statistician very, very nervous. NiGas immediately closed off the lab area and started figuring out just what happened. I have no further information about results, lawsuits or out-of-court settlements.

  19. This just in: Humans sue God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Evidence is being offered that people die.

    Seriously, since this is still a NY Times "exclusive" I'd wait for other sources since there's no telling how the Times is spinning the story with no independent corroboration.

  20. Irony of Paradox? by alexatrit · · Score: 1

    All these problems stem from speed, and the paradox created by it. Processors transistors switch on and off - faster with each new revision. Drives spin - quickly in most cases. Manufacturers attempt to create products and bring them to market as quickly as possible. IBM is no exception. The irony here is that most of the impacts can't ever be seen nearly as quickly. The same paradox has plagued the environment for hundreds of years.

    My $0.02...

    --

    Nothing but the finest in meaningless drivel
  21. List of chemicals (from memory) by xyote · · Score: 4, Informative

    Typical chemicals used back then as far as I can remember (unless my memory was affected) were; hydrofloric acid (maybe mixed with nitric acid so you would know if it splashed on you), arsenic and phosgene used as dopants, various solvents mostly zylene which is a known carcinogen (but you can buy it at Home Depot so it must be safe for you), acetone, and silane (methane with Si instead of C) which burns on contact with air to make silicon dioxide (glass).

    1. Re:List of chemicals (from memory) by modernbob · · Score: 1

      I have worked in the semiconductor industry for the past 20+ years as a process engineer. (I won't mention the companies). Chemicals I remember are as follows: sulfuric acid nitric acid cromic acid silane phosphine arsine nitrous oxide nitrogen diborane alcohol zylene there are many solvents that have proprietary recipes. MSDS will only give you contact numbers for accidental exposure. There are many types of photoresist (known carcingen) acetone Nitrogen trifloride tungsten hexafloride SOG (spin on glass) some type of polymer supended in alcohol generally (proprietary) There are many more. My opinion is that you are going to come into contact with all of these chemicals in small amount. You can be exposed when thin film furnaces pull, when spin tracks put chemicals on wafers, when semiconductor equipment is cleaned.It's simply going to happen no matter what safety gear is worn. I will say that FAB equipment and the clean room environment has come a long way in the time that I have been in the industry. I have seen my share of safety problems as well. Thus far I have not developed any diseases that I can attribute to the FAB (with the exception of lack of sleep).However, I can see the possibilities for serious problems.

    2. Re:List of chemicals (from memory) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      hydrofloric acid (maybe mixed with nitric acid so you would know if it splashed on you)

      I'm not sure I understand this. Hydrofluoric acid causes pain out of proportion with the exposure, relative to other acids, because of a reaction with calcium ions that has a secondary effect on potassium ions in nerve endings. Nitric acid is the one that you won't know about, because it very quickly paralyses nerves, and is often only detected visually.

      HF is still more dangerous than HN, because it's very strongly associated and thus fails to attack the flesh until it's already diffused past the skin surface. You can die from 5% skin exposure to a 50% solution because of the subsequent systemic shock and calcium depletion. But you'll damn well know you've been burned when it happens.

      You could mix HCl with HN to make contact with it more immediately painful, as well as for other industrial reasons. Is that possibly what you were thinking of?

      I could be wrong, and I'd be pleased to see a URL that explain the issues if so.

  22. The secrets out! by mahdi13 · · Score: 2, Funny
    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."

    Somebody leaked the "Logans Run" experiment, NOW someone is going to pay! Just wait until everyone finds out what's going on over at Intel!
    --
    "Some things have to be believed to be seen." - Ralph Hodgson
    1. Re:The secrets out! by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1

      Hey, I like the LED in my neck. It's useful to read by. At least until it started blinking a few days ago.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
  23. Re:Lousy reporting? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "the reporter was either ignorant or taking advantage of the facts."

    From the NY Times?!?!?!

    No, say it ain't so!

  24. Holy hyperbole, Statman! by Rogerborg · · 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.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    1. Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny
      Welcome to the NY Times.

      "All the news that's fit to fabricate".

    2. Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! by pangu · · Score: 0

      Only a geek can get choked up saying "statistical analyses".

    3. Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have worked in Semi fabs and you can smell the chemicals in the air, especially in the photo lithography areas. Fabs do have scrubbers and air exchange units, but they are expensive to operate to ensure a totally clean air supply.

      MSDS do exist for the chemicals used, but "incredibly" some have propriatory mixes that don't make it on the labels. Photoresists, developers, HMDS, acetone, xylene, arsenic, phosgene, hydroflouric acid, and a rainbow of heavy metals and solvents are used in maufacturing semiconductors. Hardly a clean and safe industry.

      Workers in Korean fabs actually take out cancer insurance policies in case their exposure to these chemicals "sadly" affect them. It is "chilling" that many foundries in Asia are known to dump untreated waste streams into local waterways in violation of laws because at least they provide good jobs.

      The IBM fab (now Hitachi I believe) in south San Jose, could quailify for a Superfund clean up site after decades of operation. IBM "vehemently denied" any contamination of course. They are a hugh company that is in business to make money, a few deaths along the way are simply the cost of doing business. Faster CPU's, bigger hard drives, cheaper memory are important. Human life is cheap. Other semi manufactures have had lawsuits filed against them for contaminating groundwater and affecting the heath of the local populations, Motorola for example.

      The phrase "standard deviation" wasn't in the article, the author probably does not know what that means. Most people don't! The NY Times is not a science journal so it is unlikely a detailed article would appear.

      The "facts" are is that fabs are dangerous places to work. Exposing employees to highly toxic chemicals for 40 to 50 hours per week for years on end. It would really surprise me to hear that fab workers did not have job related health problems associated to chemical exposure.

      Unless someone actually does the numbers, we will never know. These lawsuits are most llikely the only way to find out if problems do exist and the facts should come out.

    4. Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! by canajin56 · · Score: 1

      Hehe, still better than Fox. "Here is something pro-US posted to a blog! Let's announce it as coming from a reliable newspaper in the UK!"

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    5. Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Choked up? Man, it gives me a woody. Mention "relational calculus" and I'll shoot my load.

    6. Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! by msassak · · Score: 1

      That link went to an Op-Ed, which is, er, an EDITORIAL. Here's a definition for you: "A leading article in a newspaper or magazine; an editorial article; an article published as an expression of the views of the editor."

      Expression of the views of the editor! Oh My! I'm all for fact-checking the New York Times, but editorials are opinion-pieces, not unbiased reporting.

    7. Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      Oh, I believe you, Coward, I just have no rational basis for doing so.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    8. Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! by Rogerborg · · Score: 2, 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.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    9. Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! by Crispy+Critters · · Score: 1
      "That link went to an Op-Ed, which is, er, an EDITORIAL."

      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.

    10. Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! by Crispy+Critters · · Score: 1
      "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...

      When I read Herbert's column today, I immediately thought of onion-esque headlines like "New Study Shows Half of Student Test Scores Below Mean". Or claims like "alarming and puzzling new studies show that some cancer rates are above average at IBM labs and an equal number are below average, while most are pretty close to average."

      People also don't understand that extremely unlikely things will happen if you have a large enough sample size. There are probably several companies in the US where the cancer rate is three standard deviations above average just due to chance. This is why elevated rates by themselves prove nothing. If you select some company to study because they have been seriously violating OSHA standards and then find that illness rates are high, you have good reason to suspect causality. But if you select a company to study because illness rates are higher than average, you then need to find some other evidence that they were doing something unusually dangerous to show it is not random chance.

    11. Re:Holy hyperbole, Statman! by ShinmaWa · · Score: 1

      If we're using Op-Ed as a synonym for "unsubstantiated bullshit masquerading as news" then fair enough.

      Nyah... Slashdot is the synonym for that. :)

      --
      The /. Effect: Thousands of users simultaneously accessing a site to not read its content.
  25. Re:So what? by NetMagi · · Score: 1

    I'm mocking the post that was basically reducing the value of like to a nickel and making it seems as though nobody is ever responsible. .

  26. brochure by smatt-man · · Score: 0

    I'll bet that's something that doesn't make their brochure... Hmm, yes I see you have good health insurance, excellant 401K, and oh premature death, I'm in!

    --

    ---
    Lousy rotten karmic retribution.
  27. MSDS by reyalsnogard · · Score: 1

    I work in the IT dept of a manufacturing facility. Altho I'm far estranged from the bulk of hazardous chemicals, all employees are stringently informed of MSDS -- Material Safety Data Sheets -- available throughout the facility. The MSDS tomes contain a empirical breakdown of every chemical potentially encountered in/on/around the shopfloor, and a hazardous rating scale -- flammable, airborne, hazmat rating, etc.

    Does IBM not practice such employee awareness techniques?

    If it does, can the fault not be thrown back on the sick/ill/affected because, after availability of the information, they persisted in working in a potentially hazardous environment?

    1. Re:MSDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MSDS sheets are only about 10-15 years old. Since the victims in this case are claiming this happened around 30 years ago, then they probably didn't have similar sheets to notify them. Chances are, even IBM wouldn't have known.

    2. Re:MSDS by xyote · · Score: 1
      Nobody quits their job because of that. I've worked at places where everyone knew safety violations existed and nobody wanted to report those for fear of losing their job. And IBM wasn't anywhere near that bad.

      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 maintained (ever open up one of those vacuum cleaners?).

    3. Re:MSDS by dwtheman · · Score: 1

      IBM will probably come out of this unscathed because they will claim illnesses occured because of on the job carelessness and not adhering to safety regulations. There is not much excuse for anyone to sue any more since the availability of MSDS. There are plenty of slippery escape routes for IBM even for the older cases.

    4. Re:MSDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You haven't been paying much attention to the asbestos or cigarette lawsuits have you?

      Let's take the asbestos issue. In many of these lawsuits, companies were sued to the point of bankruptcy because they manufactured asbestos before the health issues of it were discovered. One company stopped production of asbestos materials upon learning it was harmful, but that didn't stop them from being sued and being forced to pay out billions to greedy, whining people who lack common sense and personal responsibility... you know the kind that think everybody owes them something. It's bullshit.

      If a company knowingly produces a product that adversely affects your health and does not include a warning on said product, I can understand a lawsuit. However, if a company posts the potential health risks (As is the case with cigarettes) or is completely unaware of the health risks at the time, they should not be held liable at all.

  28. Watch the jobs fly to Vietnam by shermozle · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How long before IBM shuts down all their manufacturing plants and moves them to places where such employee problems aren't IBM's problem?

    1. Re:Watch the jobs fly to Vietnam by Stalus · · Score: 1

      IBM doesn't do nearly as much manufacturing these days anyway. Most sites I've been to have those large manufacturing buildings, but none have had any manufacturing. Some have been occupied by other companies, and in the case of Austin, one was taken over by a culinary institute. Granted, IBM does make some things themselves, but most of the manufacturing they used to do back in the day has been outsourced for quite some time now. At least that's my understanding.

    2. Re:Watch the jobs fly to Vietnam by OS24Ever · · Score: 1

      guess what...They already are...

      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

      --

      As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.

  29. Statistics don't add up by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 3, Insightful
    IBM has employed millions of people over the past 100 years. Logic tells you that out of that population a few thousand WILL get sick. Not from negligence, they just get sick.

    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.

    --
    "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
    --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    1. Re:Statistics don't add up by geekoid · · Score: 1

      millions? somehow I doubt that.

      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.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Statistics don't add up by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      From their annual report in 2000 IBM employed 316,000 people in 2000. Assuming they have an average turnover rate for the industry at about 20%, they cycle through 60,000 people per year. Over 50 years that's well over 3,000,000.

      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.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    3. Re:Statistics don't add up by canajin56 · · Score: 1

      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 dangerous" Just like you can't dismiss your own internal reports which outline the dangers of exposure, saying "We were wrong. That report is old and we have since found that it was wrong."

      Oh...wait...you'll be fine? And you can even cut their pensions and healthcare coverage WHILE THEY DIE, and it STILL won't get any good news coverage? I guess IBM won't have any problems, then.

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    4. Re:Statistics don't add up by andywills · · Score: 1

      How did this get modded insightful? From the article:

      "Gary Adams, a chemist, sadly offers the names of friends and co-workers from the mid-1960's to late 1970's who were part of a small product development group...

      All of them died after contracting malignant illnesses, most of them succumbing in their 30's and 40's. Incredibly, four of them died after developing brain cancer, a rare disease in adults."

      Yes, IBM is a big corporation, but do you really think that a large number of cancer deaths in a group of chemists who often work with carcinogens is due to pure chance?

  30. Re:So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, you're not very good at such mockery.

  31. Re:So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, it's merely a fabricated construct induced to maintain control over the general population.

  32. More Fuzzy Math by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Dr. Richard Clapp, a respected epidemiologist from Boston University who was hired by a group of 40 plaintiffs in San Jose, said statistical analyses he has run from data provided by the company have shown troubling elevations of breast cancer, non-Hodgkins lymphoma and brain cancer among I.B.M. employees. He also said the cancers appeared to be occurring in I.B.M. employees at ages younger than the U.S. average.

    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.

    --
    "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
    --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    1. Re:More Fuzzy Math by Thomas+M+Hughes · · Score: 2, Informative
      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.

      We're not talking about a small age difference here. Quote:
      All of them died after contracting malignant illnesses, most of them succumbing in their 30's and 40's.
      People dying of cancer in their thirties is not normal. Especially not when its several of them who worked in the same conditions. My understanding is that people who smoke chronically die of cancer in their 50s to 60s for the most part. These people are dying 10-30 years earlier then that, and it seems to be a significant number of them.
    2. Re:More Fuzzy Math by alue · · Score: 1

      Has it not occurred to you that "tuning this analysis" to similar demographic might entail comparing this group of IBM employees to people who experience frequent exposure to hazardous chemicals? The claim IBM stands to prove is that IBM semiconductor employees face no more risks than average people. I don't see how "all the people in the United States" functions as a legitimate control group.

      As for your other post, the defendants are presumably dealing with similar ailments with the same cause. Moreover it's clear that the defendants aren't a set of random pickings out of IBM's workforce -- they know each other and work in related if not the same groups (and therefore deal with the same work environments). I don't see how that adds up to a reasonable lawsuit.

    3. Re:More Fuzzy Math by pigah · · Score: 1

      Odd, you quote two things which don't appear in the article. Neither "all IBM employees" nor "all the people in the United States" are in the original. The point you make about ensuring that you compare populations with similar traits is key, but we really can't tell from the article how the statistical analyses were done.

    4. Re:More Fuzzy Math by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1

      Considering the large number of IBM employees in a variety of locations, that statistic is far from meaningless. If it were one little shop in the middle of nowhere, that would be one thing. But we are talking about thousands of people in dozens of sites.

    5. Re:More Fuzzy Math by Efreet · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you have a large enough sample population (and IBM is big) you can find people dying of cancer in their 30s and 40s. Period.

      --
      This sig wasn't worth reading, was it.
    6. Re:More Fuzzy Math by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      Actually Millions of people at dozens of sites. But if you are comparing computer professionals to, say, wheat farmers, they both have different ailments.

      One would find Wheat farmers are far more prone to melanoma. And we all know wheat is very dangerous stuff.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    7. Re:More Fuzzy Math by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1

      The point is that they are comparing IBM workers to the population at large. That's statistically significant. Proof? No, but evidence that something is amiss.

    8. Re:More Fuzzy Math by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      No 40 out of said teeming millions. People are a lot more suceptable to cancer in general than you give them credit. Another goof with the truth they are using is comparing FATAL cancers in the population at large to cancers of the same type in the population studied.

      It should also be noted that cancers you "suddenly" get in your 20's and 30's has been festering in your system for years if not decades. If these people are getting cancer at an early age caused by occupational exposure, it would be in their 40's and 50's.

      The examples given in the article are a bit suspect as well. Breast cancer is pretty damn common in women. Old women and young women alike. Bone cancer is not in the right place to have been affected by chemicals from the environment. Liver, lungs, kidney, thyroid, they all process chemicals that come through your system. Skin cancer can be caused by exposure to certain compounds (oddly enough several of them are in suntan lotion.) Bones are not part of the metabolism, nor are they likely to come in contact with foriegn matter.

      Prima Face, I feel for these folks. The are obviously suffering from debilitating cancer. That does not give them carte blanche to sue the bejesus out of anybody they think wronged them. Why not just accuse IBM of witchcraft while you are at it.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
  33. workers fault ?? by Ian+0x57 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Could it be the workers fault ?? I know here where i work many safty procedures are in place, including masks for some substances but rarely do I see people using them.
    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.

    1. Re:workers fault ?? by TwistedGreen · · Score: 1

      But the point is, these employees were not trained in the dangers of the chemicals with which they were working. Such safety procedures did not [yet] exist, perhaps because the dangerous natures of the chemicals were not known.

      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.

    2. Re:workers fault ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It cant be. Blame can still go to IBM because if safety procedures are so inconvenient and difficult to follow .. plus IBM being negligent about allowing employees to take their mask off etc.

      Of course if there were a handful (5 or 6) then you can say it's the workers fault (IBM cant be expected to babysit every single person). But it seems here there's hundreds.

    3. Re:workers fault ?? by allism · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I hate to be a gomer here, but in this case I would still think it's the managers' fault - managers are responsible for enforcing workplace policies, whether it's 'get your job done' or 'follow the safety procedures'. If someone's not following safety procedures, they should be reprimanded or fired because they are posing a liability to themselves and others. Ultimately, management is responsible for everything that goes on in a workplace.

      OTOH, I am not a sue-happy type person - I think most of the product liability suits these days should be thrown out of court. I think this case may be an exception, however, since it involves safety in the workplace. The real questions, I think, are:

      1. Is there actual medical data to back up these claims? Is there some sort of proof that these people became sick (or sicker than they would have become) as a result of working at IBM?

      2. When did IBM know about the hazards and what did they do to mitigate the hazards once they knew?

      (I think there is still a certain amount of liability even if they didn't know, but I think punitive damages should only be sought if they knew and did nothing to mitigate the damage. Either way, if there is proof that something at IBM caused the medical problems, they should at least be liable for the medical bills.)

      Disclaimer: IANAL, but...

    4. Re:workers fault ?? by zhrike · · Score: 1

      Could it be the workers fault?

      Sure, it could be. But why jump to that conclusion? Industries have been willfully exposing workers to harmful chemicals for decades, and largely get away with it.

      Check out Blue Vinyl, a documentary on PVC production which uncovers criminal collusion between European and American manufacturers of PVC siding for decades. The Italian heads of
      involved companies were actually tried, but here in America our rich are royalty, so our contempt must be saved for those who snatch purses rather than those who willingly allow hundreds to die painfully from cancer through sheer greed and malice.

    5. Re:workers fault ?? by Ian+0x57 · · Score: 1

      funny.... I used the words "could it be" but you still say I jumped to a conclusion.... I was simply offering another option.
      Here is another, often in cutting edge projects the employee knows more about the substances being used than the employers. Maybe it was their responcibility to ensure the management knew the risks involved.

    6. Re:workers fault ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Employeer is responsible for workers safety, thus this can't be workers fault.

  34. War gas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    mustard - allyl isothiocyanate (war gas)

    War gas? Isn't that what war drivers develop after a long day in the car and too many drive-thru chili fry orders?

    1. Re:War gas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Allyl isothiocyanate may or may not be bad for you in large quantities (most anything is - the list doesn't mention vitamin A, an overdose of which killed about 30 children a couple of years ago in India), but it has nothing to do with mustard gas. That's an inorganic product that was named because of the smell you perceive in the moments before your lungs and mucosa disintegrate.

  35. Of course we don't want to hear this. by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We want faster processors and more memory at all costs. If there's an environmental or human toll caused by getting a new CPU and video card every year so I can play the k00lest new gamez, then I say screw 'em :P

  36. POWER kills by ajlitt · · Score: 1

    And you thought that your Deskstar was just committing suicide...

  37. Pick your poison by zephc · · Score: 4, Funny

    Go into hardware, die from nasty production chemicals

    Go into software, die from a Doritos or Mountain Dew overdose.

    Either way, you're screwed

    --
    "I would say that 99 per cent of what my father has written about his own life is false." - L. Ron Hubbard Jr.
    1. Re:Pick your poison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One time, I saw a nigger eat Doritos!

    2. Re:Pick your poison by FreshFunk510 · · Score: 1

      And that's screwed in the "you die early" sense not the "just got laid" sense.

      Someone reminds me again why I went into programming?

      As a child it made me a nerd and people shunned me.
      In college it made me a nerd and the chicks shunned me.
      At work it means I work for companies where there are no chicks and now I find out I die prematurely.

      Wtf?

      --


      "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." - Martin Luther King, Jr.
  38. Re:Ignorance is bliss by mrtroy · · Score: 1

    Now now, be fair!

    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 reach through my screen to grab anything on my monitor...but if someone does can they sue IBM for not having a warning on the monitor?

    It is understandable in a law sense to take the person as they are, ie the eggshell cases where severly troubled people react far worse to situations than an average person, but plain stupidity should not be paid large sums.

    If you cant beat them join them...after a rigerous routine of banging my head against the wall I will go to work and see what I can sue for!

    Specifically to this issue though, it does seem IBM is at fault for not providing the appropriate protection/warning to employees

    --
    [I can picture a world without war, without hate. I can picture us attacking that world, because they'd never expect it]
  39. In other news... by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 3, Funny

    White mice exposed to flourscent lights die.

    --
    "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
    --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    1. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      More to the point, white mice exposed to oxygen die. Strangely enough, white mice not exposed to oxygen also die....

    2. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thanks for the clarification. i was about to start googling for the paper...

  40. Fuzzy Math - How about just ignoring science by Mycroft_514 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I survived Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma myself. Doctors do not yet know what causes this disease. They only have a list of 7 possible causes, only one of which is hazardous chemicals.

    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 dollars again.

  41. re; d by way2trivial · · Score: 2, Informative
    have ya tried spitting in them? it really works.

    http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=UTF- 8&oe=UTF-8&q=spit+goggles

    --
    every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
    1. Re:re; d by Anonym1ty · · Score: 1
      have ya tried spitting in them? it really works.

      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.

  42. Following an Investigation Commissioned By SCO by polyp2000 · · Score: 1

    Several key production workers at IBMs Semiconductor plant have decided to Sue IBM following an investigation Commissioned by SCO. In a dual handed attack on IBM not only have SCO attacked the Blue Chip organisation alleging IP infringment, the second wave of the attack now focusses on the fabrication plant.

    The SCO investigation into IBMs chemo-fabrication technologies neglects to state that the chemicals supplied had been tampered with by none other than the Dark Lord Darl McBride, (now a household name amongst techies...) ;)

    --
    Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
    1. Re:Following an Investigation Commissioned By SCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shut up you damn fool. Stick your parroted SCO non-jokes up your dilated rectum.

    2. Re:Following an Investigation Commissioned By SCO by polyp2000 · · Score: 0

      Twat

      --
      Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
    3. Re:Following an Investigation Commissioned By SCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, those chips or whatever were running AIX at one point, which makes them a derivative work of SCO. It is clear to me that SCO is liable for all the damages.

    4. Re:Following an Investigation Commissioned By SCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do be quiet, old chap. It pains me to see you embarass yourself further with pointless, banal vulgarity.

      It would benefit us all if you could come to terms with your humour deficiency and stop inflicting the good people of Slashdot with your 'funny comments'.

  43. Re:Ignorance is bliss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After reading your reply, I feel similarly unhappy. Most people you hear about in the press suing for vast amounts of money can't be the majority surely. surely not. I feel really bad about this now. So bad, my work productivity has dropped. You've destroyed my career with your stress-inducing negativity, you, you. I'm going to sue! You should have put 'warning: bad vibes, man' at the top of your message so you only have yourself to blame.

    We can settle out of court for $2000 per month for the rest of my life. ok?

  44. My EE transistors teacher spilled HF on his hands. by emil · · Score: 2, 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 reason to work in software).

    Things may be improving. We had lots of benzene around the chemistry lab in high school, for example, but now I understand that benzene is completely banned because it was proved carcinogenic.

    Hard to undo 20 years of exposure, though.

  45. Re:So what? by NetMagi · · Score: 1

    you took the words right outta my mouth. . .

  46. Re:So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always thought was Religion, but I guess Social Contract also fits the bill. I still prefer the concept of a Social Contract though, at least it does away with all that messing about with mythical beings, super powers and pointless ceremony.

  47. You know you're on Slashdot when... by corbettw · · Score: 5, Funny

    "When I worked there OSHA (Sp.?) had done a lot to make things better."

    You know you're on Slashdot when someone is unsure of the spelling of "OSHA".

    --
    God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    1. Re:You know you're on Slashdot when... by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      You know you're on Slashdot when someone is unsure of the spelling of "OSHA".

      No, you know you're on Slashdot when someone is unsure of the spelling of "OSHA" and the post gets modded to "+5 Interesting". ;-)

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
  48. Strange headline by SgtXaos · · Score: 2, Funny

    After all, aren't ALL employees 'semiconductors'? My boss got across the 220VAC line once and didn't completely short it. The affect on *his* shorts was undesirable...

    --
    -- Don't call me "Sir," I increase entropy for a living!
  49. Re:Ignorance is bliss by bigjnsa500 · · Score: 1
    So without a sticker or a label saying "This is bad for you" lawsuits should ensue when deep down common sense would tell you it IS bad for you?

    [whistling while I walk down the hall] "Oh look Sulfuric Acid... hmmm wonder what it tastes like? Oh wait, there's a label but it doesn't say swallowing will kill, so it must be safe."

    [whistling again] "Oh look a Class 3B laser. I wonder what it looks like inside while powered on. Look, no sticker or label that says looking into a laser beam will fry my eyeballs so it must be safe."

    --
    This is a test. This is a test of the emergency sig system. This has been only a test.
  50. Problem? What Problem... move the plant to China by HighOrbit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Although this kind of threat to workers' health is an outrage, in the real world, companies just move overseas when the US cracks down with safety/anti-pollution regulations or if the lawsuits start to pile up. Instead of fixing the problem, it is much cheaper to just move overseas and keep on doing what they have always been doing. There is practically *ZERO* enforcement of workplace safety regulations, environmental pollution regulations, and workers rights in China. The right to sue your employer in China only exists on paper and there are no independent labor unions.

    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.

  51. News Flash... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lawyer finds another way to extort money from a large corporation...

  52. Re:so... by lauterm · · Score: 1

    I beg to differ. Lawsuits such as this, whether good or bad, add to the total cost of employing US citizens. Hence IBM will move its manufacturing to a country with fewer lawyers.

  53. Toner? by Andrewkov · · Score: 1

    Scary stuff. And I trusted the IBM printer techs when they told me their toner is safe to breath (in small quantites obviously). Now I'm not so sure. Anyone aware of any medical proof one way or the other?

    1. Re:Toner? by wandazulu · · Score: 1

      I don't have any medical proof, but I can share a story that happened to me: I was a tech in the early 90s when IBM was still selling their personal laser printer (I *think* it was the model 4019, but don't quote me). This machine had an interesting (i.e. abso-freak-lutely crazy) way of refilling the toner...You attached a narrow tray upside down on top of a hopper inside the printer, then turned a little crank, which peeled back the protective plastic, and the toner dropped into the hopper. Close the lid and you're done.

      Except that the latch for the tray was very very thin, and on one occasion the tray flipped up while I was turning the crank, and the toner flew into the air. I was absolutely covered in the stuff, and ended up taking 3 days off work because of respitory problems. While not on par with the crazy stuff they use to make chips (I think arsnic and cyanide are used somewhere along the way), I'm pretty certain I lessed my life expectancy that day. :(

    2. Re:Toner? by Andrewkov · · Score: 1
      Sounds familiar .. We have many IBM 3130 printers here, which have similar toner loading procedures. You place a rectangular plastic box into the printer upside down, then pull a tab which allows you to remove the plastic film on the bottom, and the toner then falls into the hopper.

      My boss decided he would attempt to refil the toner one day. Long story short, when I returned, he was frantically vacuuming the floor, which was making the spill worse (standard vacuum cleaners will blow toner all over the room, you need a special vacuum cleaner to work with toner that has a micro filter and special bag). I also had a week off work with a lung infection which might be related to this incident. I'm sure that this one day did more damage to me than 10 years of smoking would do.

  54. IBM by @#$! take a look at Intel by Hiro+San · · Score: 1

    http://www.svtc.org/hightech_prod/ http://www.webreviews.com/9711/inside_intel.html http://www.faceintel.com/toxicchemicalsclassaction .htm

  55. Re:Just another SCO conspiration... by polyp2000 · · Score: 0

    Ooooh do I dectect a touch of animosity here Darl , did we foil your evil conspiricy plan?
    Three times you have posted these comments here and each time you showed the ability to string two or more words together. Too bad .

    One more time it might actually be funny because of the ineptitude. Darl McAnonymous ;)

    --
    Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
  56. Re:SCO Joke by polyp2000 · · Score: 0

    If you dont like it here, then go to some crappy windows biased site like neowin.com , go suck Darl's and Gate's Cock you fucking drone !

    --
    Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
  57. Overclocking humans.. by jamesjw · · Score: 2, Interesting


    I guess this is what happens when IBM tries to overclock humans.. halfs their lifetimes..

    -- Jim

    --
    -- If at first you don't succeed, lie!
    1. Re:Overclocking humans.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because that's exactly what IBM is doing to people. Overclocking them. Let's boycott this menace. Now for some reason I like SCO!

  58. Obligatory Simpsons Quote by nukeade · · Score: 1

    Doctor: Here's the door to your body, see? [bring up some small fuzz balls with goofy faces and limbs from under the desk] And these are oversized novelty germs. [points to a different one up as he names each disease] That's influenza, that's bronchitis, [holds up one] and this cute little cuddle-bug is pancreatic cancer. Here's what happens when they all try to get through the door at once.
    [tries to cram a bunch through the model door. The "germs" get stuck]
    [Stooge-like]
    Woo-woo-woo-woo-woo-woo-woo ! Move it, chowderhead! [normal voice] We call it, "Three Stooges Syndrome."

    Burns: So what you're saying is, I'm indestructible!

    Doctor: Oh, no, no, in fact, even slight breeze could --

    Burns: Indestructible.

    See? Safety in numbers.

    ~Ben

  59. environment suits by magarity · · Score: 1

    All the pictures I've ever seen of semiconductor fabs has shown all the workers in environment suits to keep the machinery as totally clean as possible. So how exactly are the chemicals supposed to have gotten in to these "victims"?

    1. Re:environment suits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I read somewhere that those suits are to protect the environment from humans (hair, dander,etc) rather than vice versa.

    2. Re:environment suits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The chemicals get into these "victims" by breathing in the fabs. Chemical spills also are another common way.

      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 in the workplace. Many fabs prefer workers to wear synthetic fibre clothes because cotton clothes shed fibers like you would not believe. Don't wear perfume, hairspray, make-up, cough, sneeze, tear paper, use non-clean room paper, use pencils, chew gum, etc., ect., in a fab.

      Put on in order: gloves, hair net, shoe covers, (enter the changing room) hood, coveralls (and don't let the coveralls touch the floor as you put them on), booties over the shoe covers, a second pair of gloves, step on a sticky mat, pass through an air lock and air shower to blow off any particles, and your in the fab. Easy! To leave, just go through the door into the change room. Lots of protocol to get in, simple to get out.

      Most new fab designs are highly automated to try and eliminate workers and keep them from contaminating the wafers (one reason anyway).

  60. Don't believe everything you read! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is the NY Times, they're about as believable as SCO...

  61. Re:Problem? What Problem... move the plant to Chin by pliny3 · · Score: 2, 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.

    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.

  62. Caution: This is Op-Ed by onree · · Score: 2, Informative

    I can't speak to the merits of the case either way, but for some perspective it might be helpful to note that this is an OP-ED piece, and not a news story, from the NY Times. So although everything stated in the article may in fact be plain vanilla truth, your usual spin filters should be engaged.

  63. Re:Problem? What Problem... move the plant to Chin by crazy+blade · · Score: 1
    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.

    ...which one can probably not expect from a nation which refuses to agree to the Kyoto protocol.

    I couldn't agree with you more though. Sigh...

    --
    To err is human, but to forgive is beyond the scope of the Operating System...
  64. It's perhaps true of the whole early industry by Tsu+Dho+Nimh · · Score: 3, Insightful
    "an extraordinary number of workers were employed in the older facilities as the computer industry grew with breathtaking speed to become one of the dominant forces in American life in the last half of the 20th century."

    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?

  65. Just wait till Herb Attacks IBM for SCO Lawyers by ac7xc · · Score: 1

    Herb is just writing a OP-ED piece for the trial lawyers association. Notice the "same law firm as the tobacco companies" dead agent attack. People die of cancer all the time that don't work for IBM and I'll be damed if I will believe the scientific analysis of a man paid $100,000 for testifying in each of those civil cases. It is all about the money and the trial lawyers will get 40% of the take if their client(s) win or settles and I'm sure Herb has some financial ties to this case or the lawyers involved. The difference between the NY Times and the Weekly World is that one of them is supposed to be objective and lately it appears the WW has more credibility.

  66. zylene at Home Depot? by stomv · · Score: 1

    The zylene is sold as Goof Off, and available in the paint department at Home Depot. It has a nasty smell to it.

    I find that for many purposes, WD-40 (warning: audio on site) does the same trick, is cheaper, not smelly, and (perhaps?) not as carcinogenic.

  67. First the hard disks, next? by RMH101 · · Score: 1
    They've already shut down and sold their HDD business to Hitachi. And they were called "Deathstars". And this ThinkCenter we've got on loan looks a bit like Darth Vader.

    Coincidence?

  68. You think that's bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine what we're doing to all those people we're outsourcing from underdeveloped countries. They probably don't even have the statistics to back up a court case like this, or the laws to protect them. Not if our lobbyists have anything to say about it.

    Q. How much are cheap labor and supplies worth to you?
    A. Billions!

  69. This country like lawsuites far to much! by Creep73 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The questions:

    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 the employees of the company that manufactured that paint to sue the company when the company itself wasn't aware and wasn't able to be aware of the risks involved. As time goes on we will continue to discover the hazards we place ourselves in. That will not change! Everything that you do involves risk. Get used to it.

    I suppose I would only support this type of action if it can be proven that the company intentionally withheld knowledge from its employees and placed them in harms way with their actions. That in my opinion would be a valid case. Monetary reward should be given in the case of dishonestly or reasonable negligence. I say reasonable because if you neglect to protect your building skylight from burglars jumping or even walking on it, I do not feel you should be responsible because it isn't reasonable.

    This country has become far to sue happy.
    You can disagree with me if you wish but, please be aware that in a few years simple disagreements may be cause for lawsuits.
    oops to late. They already are.

    1. Re:This country like lawsuites far to much! by canajin56 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Even if IBM didn't know, they still deserve compensation for harm that IBM exposed them to. Just because IBM didn't know, shouldn't mean that these people are screwed.
      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!

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    2. Re:This country like lawsuites far to much! by Creep73 · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Even if IBM didn't know, they still deserve compensation for harm that IBM exposed them to."

      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 so. If IBM didn't force people into a harmful environment and they didn't deceive anyone about working in this environment why should they be held accountable for a decision made by an individual about working in that envirnment?

      You seem to believe that companies should be held accountable for not knowing everything however the individual who actually made the decision to place themselves into that environment are not accountable for that decision.

      I am sorry but it has not been shown that IBM has made money dishonestly and the employee was paid for the work they performed. You may look back and say they got the raw end of the deal and I may agree with you however, that does not add up to a lawsuit because when it was all said and done the company didn't do anything dishonest and the employees chose to be there.

  70. Dateline Interview by devnull17 · · Score: 2, 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.

  71. Bob Herbert by I'm+Spartacus! · · Score: 1

    Bob Herbert is an opinion columnist and this article appears on the Op/Ed page of the Times. Herbert is not a news reporter. He is a columnist paid to offer his opinion on many things. He is also a noted left winger with an axe to grind against large corporations.

    Call me when this is on the front page of the Washington Post or some reputable publication. The Timeshas already destroyed their reputation earlier this year as the place where they report "All the News That's Fir to Print."

    --
    "War is God's way of teaching Americans geography." -- Ambrose Bierce
  72. Re:Problem? What Problem... move the plant to Chin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That will only happen when the consumer is willing to pay three times as much for the same product.

    In other words, never.

  73. Re:My EE transistors teacher spilled HF on his han by dpilot · · Score: 2, Funny

    When I hired in at a "technology company" on Day One they gave us the HF safety talk.

    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 of ethanol/water. (which can infuse through the skin) After necessary steps, he was sent home drunk. I presume he wasn't chastised for being drunk on Company Time.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  74. Re:Problem? What Problem... move the plant to Chin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Agreed, but it isn't fair for you to blame IBM for this. Their competitors do it, so if they don't, they go out of business. It really is that simple. Sometimes the government tries to erect tariffs to balance the playing field a bit, but then everybody starts screaming about protectionism and corporate welfare. It's a no-win situation for all involved.

    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.

  75. Recent news... by Bull999999 · · Score: 1

    Recent news: IBM lays off 15,000 workers Translation: 15,000 workers fired for dying on the job.

    --
    1f u c4n r34d th1s u r34lly n33d t0 g37 l41d
  76. I love this: by jeffkjo1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Companies that provided chemicals to I.B.M. are also defendants in the suits. The workers were not told of the risks, according to the lawsuits, even after they began showing symptoms of systemic chemical poisoning.

    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?

    1. Re:I love this: by FreshFunk510 · · Score: 1

      This makes no sense. Plenty of chemicals that are harsh on the human body are sold legally. It's the responsibility of the purchasers to use them in the correct way they are meant to be used (i.e. chemicals used to develop film is toxic. It's not the responsibility of the company selling the chemicals to inform developers not to ingest it. It's the responsibility of the photo lab.).

      By your logic the company who sold chemicals to cleaners like 409 or Pinesol would be at fault if a child ingested it. That makes no sense.

      --


      "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." - Martin Luther King, Jr.
    2. Re:I love this: by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      This show's they are after money, and not information.

      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".

    3. Re:I love this: by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Its probably pretty smart of them. I mean, this is one of the last IBM manufacturing facilities left in the US. Everything is getting moved overseas. What are these people going to do for jobs? Especially up in Vermont... I sure wouldn't want to move away, and the only other factory up there I can think of is Ben and Jerry's.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
  77. How about a place like Bhopal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They're used to chemical stuff there.

  78. I do want to hear this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People died for that CPU? Wow, cool. Gimme two.

    1. Re:I do want to hear this by shaitand · · Score: 1

      No kidding, that must be a sweet processor if people were willing to die for it.

  79. what do you expect? by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    This an opinion piece, not an article in a research journal.

  80. Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I wonder how many of these people expose themselfs to other type of hazardous materials such as tobacco products, alcohol and automobiles?

  81. Re:Problem? What Problem... move the plant to Chin by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

    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.

    In a corporate world where the short is all that matters, your idea probably has even less of a chance of succeeding than the original proposal..

    Sivaram Velauthapillai

    --
    Sivaram Velauthapillai
    Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
  82. Re:Problem? What Problem... move the plant to Chin by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

    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.

    The problem is that capitalists, who basically control the economy (as well as portions of the government) will never agree to it. Tariffs are as evil as socialism to this crowd and I just don't see that working.

    The only way is to mount a social movement in the host countries but that is very difficult given that you can end up in jail easily (protesting=jail in most countries) and most people are too poor and would do anything for a job (eg. most poor countries practice SLAVE LABOUR.. the corporations don't call it that; the government doesn't call it that; but it really is)...

    Sivaram Velauthapillai

    --
    Sivaram Velauthapillai
    Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
  83. NY Times alert: by b-baggins · · Score: 1

    This is a NY Times expose. Please check Snopes for factual accuracy...

    --
    You can tell a great deal about the character of a man by observing those who hate him.
  84. Re:This country like lawsuites far too much! by beamin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If IBM has reaped the profits of business operations that wound up poisoning and killing their employees, why should the employees (or their survivors) not sue for compensation?

    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).

  85. I'm the only survivor... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...from the entire computer science department I worked with (at a prestigious East Coast research establishment).

    The rest are all dead of cancer. I have already survived malignant melanoma myself, incidentally, but I need to get another chunk taken out of my left arm ASAP. I doubt I'll see 50, but maybe somebody will cure cancer by then.

    This stuff happens all the time. It's called working in an industrialized society, where new products and processes are being implemented on a daily basis.

    You can't find out what compounds and exposure rates are dangerous without years of data for statistical analysis. This is the real world, people, it can't entirely be simulated on the damn Internet.

    Thus, we die. Don't like it? Commit suicide and beat the rush.

    All that being said, obviously the companies that use new techniques are taking a risk and should bear the brunt of the financial repercussions. After all, the employee and the company chose to use the new crap - so, the employee is dying, that's his penalty, the employer can pay off the family of the deceased, that's their penalty. No reason to let the company avoid paying for their decisions, despite those decisions being made with insufficient data.

    If the employers don't like it, well, their CEOs can dissolve the company and go on welfare.

    Fuck all the whiners on both sides. Nobody ever said you'd get out of here alive or rich.

    And all you goddamn Randite "fuck the employees" pseudo-libertarian pricks can suck my cancer-riddled butt.

  86. Usual Media Hype? by spineboy · · Score: 4, Informative
    These things are usually statistical anomalies - of course if you gather a group of people w/ cancer it looks like they have a higher risk/rate - it's because of a SELECTION BIAS!. You need to look at ALL of the employees who worked with these chemicals.

    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

    --
    ..........FULL STOP.
  87. I Worked at IBM East Fishkill by LeOTheLip · · Score: 3, Interesting

    For a year as a contractor in the late eighties. There was always a nasty stink of fumes around the entire plant. It would hit you as you drove up to the place.

    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.

  88. Are Diamonds the Answer? by 27B-6 · · Score: 1

    Can anyone enlighten me, a slashdotter and (gasp!) an English Major, as to whether or not the recently heralded diamond age will make for safer workplaces in this industry? Does the process of creating diamonds in the lab require and/or produce the same toxic chemicals?

    --
    "Trust in haste. Repent at leisure"
    1. Re:Are Diamonds the Answer? by willpost · · Score: 1

      The diamonds would just be the wafers that everything is placed on. On top of the wafer they usually add photoetch or photoresist, then shine a circuit pattern onto the wafer, and then wash it off with solvents. Hopefully they will be able to replace more of those chemicals with supercritical CO2.

  89. Rockwell Semi has similar probs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My mom worked for Rockwell Semi in Newport Beach CA for almost 20 years. For many years, she was one of the workers who "aligned" the disks/ckts that were being manuf. Many of her co-workers have developed various forms of cancer. Quite a few have died. Many people (of all ages) have thyroid problems - the most common problem in their group. Rockwell refuses to acknowledge that there is/was a problem.

  90. Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition: IBM is Okay by reporter · · Score: 2, Interesting
    One thing that distinguishes the United States of America (and other Western countries) from non-Western countries is that Americans try their best to seek justice even if the process of justice is not perfect. Clearly, IBM and the manufacturers of dangerous chemicals used in processing semiconducters have committed an injustice against some of the employees at IBM. IBM should pay significant financial compensation to those employees or to the surviving relatives of the deceased employees.

    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 produced by the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition. 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 produced by the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition.

    ... from the desk of the reporter

  91. Re:My EE transistors teacher spilled HF on his han by wass · · Score: 1
    Yes, HF is super nasty stuff, but it's usually called Hydrofluoric Acid. Somebody caused a small HF spill at a lab I worked in last summer, and while only a few drops spilled (on the counter, not on anybody) the environmental cleanup people said HF was the one chemical they fear the most.

    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 attack other parts of the nervous system, and one can get fluorine poisoning. Very nasty stuff.

    Another response here says to wash off HF in ethanol, which I've never heard of. Here in our lab we have a tube of Calcium Gluconate, which one would use in case of a spill. The theory being the HF eats that calcium instead of in one's bones.

    Besides HF, as you've mentioned, two common poisons used in the semiconducting industry are phosphine gas and arsine gas (used for InP and GaAs respectively). I've worked in labs that have used these gases, and I do feel kind of uncomfortable knowing there's a tank of poison gas right near me, and hoping that all tubes and leak detectors are fully functioning properly.

    Arsine smells like almonds, and phosphine like garlic. And rumour has it that by the time you can smell these gases you've already been lethally exposed to the poisons. Not sure how true that is, but there have been many deaths this way.

    In one of my old labs long before I worked there, somebody committed suicide by opening the arsine gas lines purposely. In another urban legend I've heard, a guy wanted a few weeks of paid sick leave. So before a mandatory employee arsenic test, he inhaled a small amount of arsine gas, so as to test positive for arsenic exposure. He died a few days later.

    Anyway, those are some of the worse chemicals. But there's alot of 'generic' stuff which can be bad over long times, like acetone, hexane, benzene, etc. Lithography and crystal growing is a much nastier business than it seems!

    --

    make world, not war

  92. Re:This country like lawsuites far too much! by Creep73 · · Score: 1

    "If IBM has reaped the profits of business operations that wound up poisoning and killing their employees, why should the employees (or their survivors) not sue for compensation?"

    This is similar to the last persons reply and so I am not going to go into what I think. Please see my reply to canajin56.

    I understand that you want to be for the people who have been injured. It is horrible that these things happen. My opinion simply stated is, just because something horrible happens does not equate to a compensable offense.

  93. Re:My EE transistors teacher spilled HF on his han by eaolson · · Score: 1
    Hydrogen Fluoride supposedly passes right through your skin and attacks your bones.

    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.

  94. A shield wouldn't work by willpost · · Score: 1

    The work is done in clean room environments, where the same air is recirculated all day. You would need respirators and full body bio-suits to not breathe in the chemicals.

    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.

  95. Source by RevSmiley · · Score: 1

    As the source of this article is the New York Times
    and it's on the op ed page I give it very little weight. Since even the "news" at the NYT is opinion most of the time.

    Could this be true, yes. Do I trust the NYT, no.
    Give us some non-political unlawyer spun, non wacko enviro bleating facts please.

    --
    As you can see I don't care about my karma.
  96. If you listened to all the warnings . . . by Gallowglass · · Score: 1
    . . . you wouldn't ingest anything.

    This is an old song. [Something] I ingested is making me sick. Why didn't anyone warn me!

    I remember a song that was out in the '50s by Phil Harris called "Some Little Bug Is Gonna Get You:.


    Some little bug is gonna find you someday.
    Some little bug will creep behind you someday.
    Then he'll get right down in your gizzard,
    And if you lose him, you're a wizard.
    Some little bug is gonna find you someday.

    Now you'll die from drinkin' whiskey,
    And drinkin' water's just as risky!
    And, Oh! My friends, the things that ice cream does!!
    1. Re:If you listened to all the warnings . . . by ProphetOfCod · · Score: 1

      I prefer the song "Process Man" by Great Big Sea.

      CHORUS:
      And its go boys go
      They'll time your every breath
      And every day in this place your two days near to death
      But you go...
      Well a process man am I and I'm tellin' you no lie
      I work and breathe among the fumes that tread across the sky
      There's thunder all around me and there's poison in the air
      There's a lousy smell that smacks of hell and dust all in me hair
      CHORUS
      Well I've worked among the spitters and I breathe the oily smoke
      I've shovelled up the gypsum and it neigh 'on makes you choke
      I've stood knee deep cyanide, got sick with a caustic burn
      Been working rough, I've seen enough, to make your stomach turn
      CHORUS
      There's overtime and bonus opportunities galore
      The young men like their money and they all come back for more
      But soon your knocking on and you look older than you should
      For every bob made on the job, you pay with flesh and blood
      CHORUS
      Well a process man am I and I'm telling you no lie
      I work and breathe among the fumes that tread across the sky
      There's thunder all around me and there's poison in the air
      There's a lousy smell that smacks of hell and dust all in me hair
      CHORUS x 2

      Lyrics are courtesy of elyrics.net

      --
      Worship the Fish... or DIE!!!
  97. Boycotting Products Made in China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since the Chinese do not enforce stringent environmental and work regulations that American enforce on American companies like IBM, we should boycott products made in China (which includes Taiwan and Hong Kong). Please read "Silicon Vally Toxics Coalition: IBM is Okay".

  98. Re:Ignorance is bliss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    McDonald's is personally responsible for serving a beverage that is not so hot as to be capable of causing serious burns. That she spilled said coffee was her fault. That the coffee was substantially hotter than necessary was McD's. Had it not been so hot, she would not have needed medical treatment.

  99. Won't happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The WTO treaty disallows such tactics. We can't say that we won't trade with someone, or even raise their terrifs, because we don't like the way they do business without violating this treaty. The country in question would just petition the WTO and we would be found at fault, it has happened many time before. The chances are slim that the US government would say, "We don't care, we are going to do it anyway". So far any time the WTO has said we can't do something we have stopped (as opposed to european countries that still won't trade in genetic foods). The WTO was set up explicitly to stop these types of practices.

    Of course China has not signed the WTO treaty so it doesn't matter in this case. However, in the past we have been making moves to try and get them into the WTO. Besides, I really don't see the US government placing a terrif on tech products, too many high profile lobbiests would be against it.

    NR

  100. Another option: wouldn't surprise me... by EvilAlien · · Score: 1
    ... if this was just more SCO FUD.

    Find out your intellectual property complaints are baseless? No worries, just manufacture a few deaths and another lawsuit! Its a conspiracy I tell you... IBM, the masters behind the wildly successful OS/2 WARP, can do no wrong.

    --
    perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5, (41*2), sqrt(7056), (unpack(c,H)-2), oct(115), 10)'
  101. xylene

    --
    The clearance system sounds logical. It is not. It is completely arbitrary. -- John Bolton
  102. People at IBM have shorter lifetimes by zarloq · · Score: 1

    It's a known fact that the average lifetime for retired IBM employees is less than 1 year. I know several people who have died after 30 days of retirement.

    The problem is they've got no hobbies or "life" outside of work. I guess it's not just a problem for the new generation of techies.

  103. Typo ...Sorry (Re:Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition) by reporter · · Score: 1
    There is a serious typographical error in the parent article. The sentence "At the same time, non-Westerners like the Koreans and the Chinese simply do the care about the environment or the health of employees." should be "At the same time, non-Westerners like the Koreans and the Chinese simply do _NOT_ the care about the environment or the health of employees."

    Sorry.

  104. That is why experience pays so well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you have 20 years in the field it is a good opportunity because the other candidates are dead.

  105. Re:Ignorance is bliss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The McDonald's hot coffee lawsuit is often used as an example of how ridiculous lawsuits are:

    However, if you actually look at the details it turns out to be much more reasonable than it appears on the surface. There were >700 prior cases of burns at McDonald's outlets, but they didn't want to decrease the temperature of their coffee machines because that would result in less efficient use of the beans. And because it all comes down to the pocketbook, if they would lose a little profit from using cooler water versus a nebulous safety issue, they'll go with the profit.

    I agree that it seems wrong that an individual who was clumsy/stupid should be rewarding with hundreds of thousands of dollars beyond their medical bills: however, I do think punitive punishments are important because large corporations otherwise do not have the appropriate safety incentives.

    I don't know about the specific statistics on the IBM case, but certainly there are many cases of companies willfully ignoring signs of possible dangers (see Bhopal, PVC, asbestos, methyl mercury, etc.). Of course, I would bet that there are some cases where statistically not-significant "cancer clusters" were misused to win lawsuits (eg breast implants, though it is complicated).

    For my McDonald's source, you can look at the following website (or Google Liebeck and McDonald's):

    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stella_Liebeck_v._ Mc Donald's_Corporation

  106. Re:Ignorance is bliss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ahem. Banging my head against the wall is part of my job description you insensitive clod!

  107. Re:My EE transistors teacher spilled HF on his han by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    http://www.ehs.washington.edu/Updates/tipsHFAcid.h tm

    The technician was seated when he knocked over a small quantity (between 100 and 230 ml) of hydrofluoric acid (HF) onto his lap, splashing both thighs.

    The technician sustained burns to 9% of his body, despite washing his legs with water at 6 liters/min. No calcium gluconate gel was applied to the affected area and contaminated clothing was not removed during the flushing with water. His right leg was amputated 7 days after the incident. He subsequently died from multi-organ failure 15 days after the hydrofluoric acid spill.

  108. Business is war... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sacrifice as many employees as it takes to destroy the SCO uprising!

  109. Re:SCO Joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You truly are stupid. My annoyance was directed at those pricks with a retarded sense of humour who like to flood this site with their pointless, unfunny comments. In general, Slashdot is quite good.

  110. Re:Just another SCO conspiration... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What the hell? Are you smoking the crack?

    Every time you've posted to this story you have come across as a complete retard incapable of forming his own opinions, relying on dubious Slashdot propaganda to appear 'interesting' and 'witty'.

    Get a fucking clue.

  111. Re:Ignorance is bliss by clarkcox3 · · Score: 1

    Look, when most people make coffee at home, they boil the water. Water cannot get any hotter than the boiling point (if it did, it would be a gas). So that means that McDonald's couldn't get their coffee any hotter than people at home can.

    This means that all hot drinks should be considered dangerous, and that if you get burned because you put it in your lap, it's your own damn fault.

    Now, because of this woman, when I, on occasion, get breakfast at McDonalds, the coffee is cold by the time I make it to work.

    --
    There are no tiger attacks in my area and it's all because this rock I'm holding keeps the tigers away.
  112. Re:Fogging goggles by some+guy+I+know · · Score: 1

    Try fabric softener sheets, the kind that you throw into a clothes dryer to soften clothes and prevent wrinkles.
    The only problem with them is that they leave a slight hazy film on the plastic/safety glass, but that's not as bad as fog.
    (You can try wiping them with a tissue to remove the haze, but removing too much negates the anti-fogging effect.)

    --
    Those who sacrifice security to condemn liberty deserve to repeat history or something. - Benjamin Santayana