Rheena.com
  • Register
  • Forgotten Your Password?
  • The Facebook Platform
The Home Of Mr Modchips, for Xbox 360, Playstation 3, Wii, Nds, Minimus AVR USB Development Board And All Your Console Needs

  • Home
    • XBOX 360
    • PLAYSTATION 3
    • SONY PSP AND PS VITA
    • NINTENDO Wii AND Wii U
    • NINTENDO DS/3DS
    • MOBILE DEVICES
    • MULTI FORMAT
    • GUIDES AND DOWNLOADS
  • Forum
  • Arcade
  • What's New?
  • Advanced Search
  1. If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
  • Menu

    • XBOX 360
    • PLAYSTATION 3
    • SONY PSP AND PS VITA
    • NINTENDO Wii AND Wii U
    • NINTENDO DS/3DS
    • MOBILE DEVICES
    • MULTI FORMAT
    • GUIDES AND DOWNLOADS
  • Currently Active UsersCurrently Active Users

    2 members and 1735 guests

    Most users ever online was 17,170, 28-04-2011 at 05:17 AM.

  • Advert

  • Advert

  • The Home Of Mr Modchips, for Xbox 360, Playstation 3, Wii, Nds, Minimus AVR USB Development Board And All Your Console Needs
  • Follow RheenaForums on Twitter
    Follow Rheena Forums RSS Feed
  • Nokia establishes stance on conflict minerals in formal policy

    0 Comments Comments
    Recent weeks have seen a swell of interest in corporate responsibility, particularly with regard to technology manufacturing and supply chains. Last month, Apple CEO Tim Cook affirmed his company's commitment to ethically and environmentally sound practices, evoking sentiments that were echoed today in a similar announcement from Nokia. Seizing the opportunity to establish some goodwill among socially conscious consumers, the Finnish manufacturer has just released a policy outlining its philosophy on conflict minerals -- metals like gold, tungsten and tin that have played a direct role in fueling civil violence and unrest in the Democratic Republic of Congo. In the document (linked below), Nokia acknowledged that it doesn't play a direct role in obtaining these materials, but emphasized its strict traceability requirements. All suppliers, Nokia says, must provide detailed information on the sourcing of its metals, going back to the smelter phase, at a minimum, and even to the mine itself, if necessary.



    The company also highlighted its adherence to guidelines established by the EICC-GeSI Extractives Work Group, which both Apple and Intel have already joined. Granted, it's impossible for a single company to wipe out civil strife and human rights abuses in one fell swoop, but with this codified approach, Nokia hopes to at least "increase transparency, ensure responsible procurement by our suppliers and sub-suppliers, and drive positive change."

    Source
    This article was originally published in forum thread: Nokia establishes stance on conflict minerals in formal policy started by Bald Bouncer View original post
    1. Categories:
    2. Nokia
    Tags: africa, apple, civil war, civilwar, conflict, conflict minerals, conflictminerals, corporate responsibility, corporateresponsibility, democratic republic of congo, democraticrepublicofcongo, drc, eicc-gesi extractives work group, eicc-gesiextractivesworkgroup, environment, espoo, gold, human rights, humanrights, intel, metals, mining, nokia, policy, politics, public policy, publicpolicy, social responsibility, socialresponsibility, traceability, tungsten, war
  • Rheena.com The Home Of The Gamer
  • Archive
  • Top
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:18 AM.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.1.12
Copyright © 2012 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.
Reporting On The Console Scene Since 1995