The Machine Sees What It’s Told to See
Cadbury’s Cocoa Life program says their AI can spot child labor with 85% accuracy, but only within the GPS locations given to them by cocoa cooperatives. That means if a child like Kofi walks out of the cocoa field and into a nearby mine, the system stops tracking him.
“Our satellites can identify children carrying machetes or cocoa sacks,” said a Nestlé sustainability officer, who asked not to be named. “But if that same child enters a mine pit after school? Our system marks that as ‘out of scope.’”
Trending
- Mahama’s $150 Million Coastal Defense Promise Under Scrutiny: Inside Ghana’s Delayed WACA Project and the High-Stakes Fight Against Rising Tidal Threats
- Will Ghana’s New E-Visa Trigger a Tourism and Investment Surge? Inside Mahama’s Border Reform Gamble
- Lights Out: How Illegal Light Fishing Is Emptying Ghana’s Western Region Waters …As Chinese Trawlers Continue Decimating Ghana’s Fisheries
- Kumasi Human Trafficking Crackdown: GIS Rescue Operation Reveals 606 Migrants, Including 381 Children in Suspected Forced Street-Begging Exploitation Network
- Xenophobic Attacks in South Africa: Ghana Presses Pretoria Over Assaults on Ghanaians
- Ghana Visa for Canadian Citizens: Complete 2026 Guide – Types, Requirements, Application Steps
- Power Stability or Political Promise? Inside Ghana’s 2,500-Transformer Rollout and the Real State of the Grid
- President Mahama’s “Not Ambulances” Clarification Exposes Deeper Questions About Ghana’s Last-Mile Health Strategy
