logo
Japan firm slammed for forced nude photos, testicle-grabbing to punish mediocre staff

Japan firm slammed for forced nude photos, testicle-grabbing to punish mediocre staff

A Japanese company has sparked outrage by dishing out degrading punishments to staff who fail to meet sales targets.
Advertisement
Underperforming employees were forced to take nude photos of themselves and were physically assaulted, including having their testicles grabbed by the boss.
The incident came to light after five former employees of the Neo Corporation, headquartered in Osaka, filed a lawsuit in March alleging verbal abuse and power harassment.
Founded in 1999, the Neo Corporation sells electricity and energy-saving equipment, as well as installing it. The firm has nine branches across Japan.
Five former employees filed a lawsuit against the Neo Corporation in March. Photo: Shutterstock
The company had previously drawn attention for its bold recruitment advertisements, which claimed that the average annual income for sales staff in 2024 was 14.27 million yen (US$98,000), with 57.1 per cent of its salespeople earning more than 10 million yen (US$70,000) a year.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

From rocket ballet to space fireworks: China's aerospace innovators push boundaries
From rocket ballet to space fireworks: China's aerospace innovators push boundaries

South China Morning Post

time19 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

From rocket ballet to space fireworks: China's aerospace innovators push boundaries

A start-up company in southwestern China has revealed its latest innovations in rocket technology , highlighting how the country's cutting-edge aerospace capabilities are expanding into the civilian sector. Lingkong Tianxing Technology unveiled its self-developed reusable liquid rocket with an animated video simulation posted to its official website on Tuesday. The clip showcased advanced flight control technologies, including mid-air flips and in-flight reignition. The clip shows the VTVL (vertical take-off and vertical landing) rocket igniting and ascending to an altitude of nearly 2km (1.2 miles), where control surfaces on both sides of the nose shift angles, transitioning the rocket from vertical ascent to an upwards-slanting trajectory in a ballet-like motion. After around 30 seconds, the engine shuts down upon reaching peak altitude and the rocket executes its first flip. The rocket then begins to descend nose-first, slowing down at a high 'angle of attack' – a term referring to the angle between the rocket's 'longitudinal axis' or nose direction and its direction of motion through the air. A high angle helps to generate aerodynamic drag for slowing down. About 10 seconds later, the engine reignites as the wings adjust their angles, enabling the rocket to perform a second flip and return to a nose-up position.

China's first home-grown carrier, Trump's shipbuilding plans: SCMP daily highlights
China's first home-grown carrier, Trump's shipbuilding plans: SCMP daily highlights

South China Morning Post

time19 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

China's first home-grown carrier, Trump's shipbuilding plans: SCMP daily highlights

Catch up on some of SCMP's biggest China stories of the day. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing A new book contending that Apple went too far in consolidating its operations in China is prompting debate among analysts of the country – some of whom say the company may have had no realistic alternatives. The Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan says his country's Crossroads of Peace and China's belt and road project are interdependent. Illustration: Henry Wong Observers say the US may struggle to match China's fast-growing naval fleet and commercial shipbuilding, even with the support of Asian allies.

Alibaba's open-source AI model shines as Qwen-based agentic framework tops global ranking
Alibaba's open-source AI model shines as Qwen-based agentic framework tops global ranking

South China Morning Post

time37 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

Alibaba's open-source AI model shines as Qwen-based agentic framework tops global ranking

Jointly developed by open-source initiative Agentica and San Francisco-based start-up Together AI, DeepSWE was trained on the Qwen3-32B large language model (LLM) – part of Alibaba Cloud's third-generation family of AI models. It topped the leaderboard of the latest SWEBench-Verified test, scoring 59 per cent accuracy against other so-called open-weight models like DeepSeek 's V3-0324, the developers said in a blog post on Wednesday. Agentic frameworks are software platforms that provide the structure, tools and functionalities to build, deploy and manage AI agents. They enable AI agents to collaborate, make decisions and automate complex tasks. AI agents, such as Chinese start-up Butterfly Effect's Manus , are software programs that are capable of autonomously performing tasks on behalf of a user or another system. Essentially, these agents create a plan of specific tasks and subtasks to complete a goal using available resources. DeepSWE marks the latest example of Hangzhou -based Alibaba's growing leadership position in the global open-source community. Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post. The open-source approach gives public access to a program's source code, allowing third-party software developers to modify or share its design, fix broken links or scale up its capabilities.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store