

Technology, Labor Rights, and Political Power in Kenya and Across Africa
Jun 8, 2025
Nerima Wako-Ojiwa, director of Siasa Place, and Odanga Madung, a tech and society researcher, discuss the critical intersection of technology, labor rights, and political power in Africa. They delve into the exploitation of content moderators and AI data annotators, emphasizing the urgent need for labor rights advocacy. The duo highlights how governments use platform failures to impose censorship and surveillance. Additionally, they share insights on the potential of youth movements to drive a more just future, battling biases in tech and championing digital rights.
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Content Moderators Organize for Rights
- Content moderators and digital workers in Kenya are organizing into unions and movements to claim labor rights and protections.
- These efforts highlight the invisibility and exploitation of tech platform workers facing slow legal progress and blacklisting.
AI Biases and Gender Disinformation
- AI systems reflect harmful biases against African contexts due to skewed datasets from Western-centric developers.
- Adversarial AI also spreads gender disinformation, intensifying political and social harms in Africa.
Tech Giants' Political Influence
- Large tech companies exert excessive political influence, complicating accountability efforts.
- There’s a growing recognition worldwide that these companies prioritize profits over human and worker rights.