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Uber Shut Down In Multiple Countries Following Raids 366

wired_parrot (768394) writes "Worldwide raids were carried out against Uber offices in Germany, France and South Korea. In Germany, the raids followed a court ruling banning Uber from operating without a license. In Paris, raids followed an investigation into deceptive practices. And in South Korea, 30 people, including Uber's CEO, were charged with running an illegal taxi service."
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Uber Shut Down In Multiple Countries Following Raids

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  • by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @10:07PM (#49289099)

    ... a fine using Bitcoin and stuff.

  • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @10:08PM (#49289103)

    I know, licensing has a bit of a reason behind it, but still, I can't help feel that its the established players who want to kill any newcoming competition. that - in itself - really annoys me.

    I wonder if this will backfire and people will want to support the underdog.

    • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @10:17PM (#49289139) Homepage Journal

      Throughout history, poverty is the normal condition of man. Advances which permit this norm to be exceeded - here and there, now and then - are the work of an extremely small minority, frequently despised, often condemned, and almost always opposed by all right-thinking people. Whenever this tiny minority is kept from creating, or (as sometimes happens) is driven out of a society, the people then slip back into abject poverty.

      This is known as "bad luck." - Robert A. Heinlein

      • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @10:28PM (#49289189)

        Except Uber is just exploiting people to enrich themselves.

        • But they help also (Score:4, Insightful)

          by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @10:32PM (#49289197)

          To me it doesn't even matter if Uber is exploitive or not. They simply provide a vastly better service than any taxi I have ever used.

          To that extent, they are not "just" anything - they are also helping real people, people that will now have the same problems they did before uber in areas where competition with the driving monopolies are not allowed.

          • by Grishnakh ( 216268 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @10:43PM (#49289235)

            To me it doesn't even matter if Uber is exploitive or not. They simply provide a vastly better service than any taxi I have ever used.

            This is mostly the way I feel, with an exception: in Manhattan, I can't imagine why you'd want to bother with Uber. Uber requires starting an app on your phone, punching in a destination, waiting for someone to get to you, etc. With a taxi, you just stand on the side of the street and raise your arm, and one is there in seconds. But Manhattan is exceptional that way.

            Everywhere else (meaning places that aren't as dense as Manhattan, mainly suburban areas), cabs are a total PITA. You have to look them up somehow, wait 30-60 minutes for them to arrive, then give the dumb driver turn-by-turn directions because he has no idea where your destination is, then at the end you find out the fare is astronomical. Uber is easy, fast, you can see how long it'll take the driver to get to you, and the cost is much less.

            • by Shadow of Eternity ( 795165 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @11:21PM (#49289373)

              if their product is so superior they should have no problems complying with basic licensing requirements that exist for very serious reasons.

              • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @11:37PM (#49289435)

                Uh... that so-called "basic licensing requirements" is a joke. There is no reason that Taxi Tokens (licenses) should be as expensive and hard to obtain as they are. Follow the money. Yes, Uber should follow the law, same as every Taxi company. Yes, the law needs to change to something based on science not bribery.

                • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 19, 2015 @01:29AM (#49289689)

                  Taxi Tokens exist as a way to limit the number of Taxi's (and thus works as a "Taxi Union" of sorts) , and there are extremely specific licensing requirements just to have one.

                  Uber threatens that monopoly. Which is good. There is no reason a Taxi medallion should cost more than the fricken vehicle by a factor of 10. NYC is one example of where the Taxi Medallions are used as investment leverage and not for their intended purpose. Vancouver BC is another (Where Taxi's can't cross city boundaries to pick up fares.) Uber barely had a chance in Vancouver before the Taxi cartel swayed the government against them.

                  And in a way Uber is skirting the law much in the way Megaupload did. They know they are operating an illegal taxi service, and barely want to acknoledge the amount of scams going on that use it.

                  Hell CSI:Cyber today is basically saying just that "Uber is unsafe"

                  • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

                    If Uber were running a cab service with professional, full-time drivers, then absolutely. Actually, they DO that, but nobody cares. The controversial part of Uber is the gypsy cab bit, where somebody with a credit card and a phone is suddenly a cabby.

                • by dywolf ( 2673597 )

                  part of the reason for the limit in the first place in places like NYC isn't to protect the existing companies even if it has that effect, but to protect the traffic flow from congestion. NYC traffic is still horribly congested, but past experience has shown that demand and supply for taxis service can easily exceeds the capacity of the streets to handle that much traffic. after all, in a place like NYC, they're quite limited when it comes to adding lanes or widening streets.

                  • Panama City (Score:5, Insightful)

                    by Tenebrousedge ( 1226584 ) <tenebrousedge@gmail. c o m> on Thursday March 19, 2015 @10:51AM (#49292321)

                    Panama City has essentially zero licensing restrictions on cab ownership. You can always catch a taxi...except that sometimes they won't take you more than a couple blocks because of congestion. You tell them where you want to go before you get in so that they have the opportunity to tell you to fuck off, and that happens as often as not. Generally speaking in those cases you're probably better off walking anyway. The taxis themselves are almost always roadworthy, though!

                    Anyone who wants to support Uber should spend some time in Panama City, as an object lesson on the reasons for taxi regulations.

                    • Re:Panama City (Score:4, Insightful)

                      by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Thursday March 19, 2015 @02:04PM (#49293973)

                      Or spend some time in one of the many places where the local advice is something along the lines of "always take the RED taxis, because they're at least all owned by a company. The others, well, you might make it, or you might not."

                • Comment removed based on user account deletion
            • Getting a taxi can suck in Manhattan. If you want to go to the airport, or to Brooklyn or Queens, or happen to be a minority a lot of the time they won't stop let alone agree to take you to your destination. Forcing you to get a new cab...sure you could report them, but that doesn't help the current situation.

              Uber just works. The drivers are nicer, the cars are cleaner, the prices are cheaper. The app takes seconds to smart and is transparent to pay for.

              Why someone would prefer a yellow cab is beyond me.

            • you must be white.
              (sorry, cliche joke, having never been to Manhattan, or a minority, I can't confirm the validity of this.)

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by mjwx ( 966435 )

            To me it doesn't even matter if Uber is exploitive or not. They simply provide a vastly better service than any taxi I have ever used.

            So you dont care how a product is made, as long as it's served to you nicely?

            Well you are an Apple fanboy.

            The problem is, every Uber car I've ever gotten into has been a terrible mess, unwashed and bad smelling, much like the drivers. The last one was a Pug 208 deisel that looked like it had never been cleaned since the dealer got rid of it (and it looks like the dealer got rid of by chucking it out with some food scraps). It looked, smelled and sounded like a farmyard. Compared to this where all the

            • So you dont care how a product is made, as long as it's served to you nicely?

              So long as it serves ME better than any existing product, yes.

              To frame the discussion, Uber is far less dire a company than most cabbie unions. I have been cheated by nearly every cab driver I've ever used, had them refuse to accept payment from my wife, etc. None of that is even possible on Uber.

              You say that typing on a device that was produced by workers paid half those of Apple workers.

              Yeah, I think I'm going to pass on that c

              • I have been cheated by nearly every cab driver I've ever used, had them refuse to accept payment from my wife, etc. None of that is even possible on Uber.

                See, that's a pretty reasonable argument for why you support and use Uber. I may not totally agree, (I have mixed feeling about Uber personally), but that would have been a valid point. Instead you went with... "it doesn't even matter if Uber is exploitive" ...This is just inflammatory rhetoric and you know it. You were responding to a troll AC after all. So I don't know about mjwx, but your comment was a bit ridiculous also.

                If you actually want to promote something, might want to find a better line of

                • by lgw ( 121541 )

                  Exploitive of whom? The drivers? Uber can't possibly hold a candle to cab companies in that respect! Cab companies are fucking brutal when it comes to drivers who don't own their own cars, and provide a strong incentive to work 48-hour shifts in many markets - that doesn't help anyone.

                  • I didnt call them exploitative -- that was some troll AC a few posts up. I'm just saying that not caring if they were, is a bad argument.

                    Frankly, your post is full of hyperbole too though. It would be nice if we could drop the BS and have a discussion. (I know, I know this is slashdot and all). But if you are going to make specific claims, "48 hour shifts" in (weasel word) "many" markets -- it'd be nice if you had a source. Was just reading at 48 hours without sleep you start having involuntary micro-sl

              • by GlennC ( 96879 ) on Thursday March 19, 2015 @08:42AM (#49291173)

                You could save yourself a whole lot of typing by simply repeating, "I'm getting what I want, fuck everyone else."

        • by JonathanR ( 852748 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @10:44PM (#49289241)

          I think they call that "commerce". The drivers are probably exploiting Uber for their own enrichment.

          • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 19, 2015 @01:10AM (#49289631)

            I think they call that "commerce". The drivers are probably exploiting Uber for their own enrichment.

            Hahahaha no. Uber doesn't pay to maintain the vehicles, the drivers do. Both cleaning and mechanical upkeep. Uber doesn't pay for the insurance on the vehicle, and many of these drivers will find out the hard way that using it for Commercial Contract work falls outside their insurance terms & conditions. In many cases they will also find out the hard way that what they are doing is technically Commercial vehicle operation, which requires a different class of driver's license in most places- a license which is harder to get and easier to lose. The drivers are the ones liable in the event a passenger decides to sue them for something, and will have to foot their own legal bills to defend themselves. They're going to realize that their tax filing has to be done differently. They're going to find out they're the ones on the hook for not carrying the proper levels of insurance/bonding.

            Look, it's pretty simple. If you get paid to give someone a ride, you're operating the vehicle for Commercial Purposes. There's a whole host of things you have to adhere to in order to do that legally. What Uber is doing is shifting that burden onto the drivers, most of whom don't understand the actual costs involved.

            I like the idea behind what the Uber App itself does, but I dislike how the company actually operates. It's not "ride sharing" if you pay anything at all for the ride, period.

            • I spoke to hundred of Uber drivers about this here in SF (basically every ride I take..) - not a single one so far echo'd that stuff. I'm sure they could be paid more and have more advantage, but every single time they're telling me that they make more with Uber (even on 7USD pool rides, they get more than 7 USD) than they would with most jobs they could take at this time in their lives - certainly more than taxi drivers too!

              So I don't know but that deal seems to work good enough for them.

              • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Thursday March 19, 2015 @05:02PM (#49295803)

                The AC has a good point, that you seem to have missed. It's particularly easy with cars to think that you're getting a good deal in the short term. Oh, I burned $100 in gas and made $300! This is awesome! Except you forgot to account for commercial insurance (or getting sued if you don't have it), a commercial drivers license (or getting fined if you don't have it), maintenance, amortization of the car (particularly if you're leasing it and discover that, whoops, your lease doesn't cover commercial use), unemployment insurance, pension, health care (especially if you "forget" to pay them and the government comes knocking one day).

                Those happy Uber drivers might be fooling themselves. But if they are and they wise up one day and quit, well, there are lots of other suckers, er, employees, for Uber.

            • by swb ( 14022 ) on Thursday March 19, 2015 @11:55AM (#49292861)

              I asked my last Uber driver (who was driving her BMW 328i) how she liked it, the money, etc. Her answer was "I drove for a week and quit my two other jobs. It's all I do now."

              Now, if you did some kind of spreadsheet and factored in maintenance, correct insurance, etc, it might end up being "not so good of a deal" but that's really impossible to say unless you're the driver.

              Calling it "exploitation" is hyperbolic in the same way that a Marxist calls anyone working for a capitalist "exploited". OK, within a specific analytic framework and with a specific set of value judgements made maybe it is, but at the same time you can find a lot of other people who one group calls "exploited" who say "What? I'm totally satisfied with this arrangement."

        • by SumDog ( 466607 )

          So are taxi companies. And most of the drivers get paid better on Uber; much better! So they're exploiting people less than the big players, giving drivers more money, people cheaper fairs and they still turn enough money to keep them going.

          The laws in place were designed to make sure taxi drivers got a fare shake and earned a decent amount of money; not to get pushed out by cheap-fly-by-night shit shops. But here we see the only people benefiting from this are the established taxi regimes.

      • apparently heinlein existed in a universe where the rich and powerful don't take advantage of the poor and weak, as has been the case since, gee, all of history and every society

        people who believe stuff like that heinlein quote are known by those with money and power as "useful fools" and "good slaves"

      • "A witty saying proves nothing" - Voltaire.
        Besides, Heinlein is overrated, eternally stuck in the 1950ies and had a strange obsession with slide rules.

    • The establishment has to answer the many complaints from the taxi unions despite (in France at least) one of the crapiest service in the world. Less working taxi leads to unemployment. And, to be fair, the requirements to become a taxi - would such requirement be relevant in the first place - are extremely heavy. All of a sudden Uber blooms everywhere and offers a service which is, actually, illegal in many countries. I'm glad Uber comes to balance the taxis monopoly, but all the aggressive and legal reacti
    • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @11:13PM (#49289345)

      I know, licensing has a bit of a reason behind it, but still, I can't help feel that its the established players who want to kill any newcoming competition. that - in itself - really annoys me.

      I wonder if this will backfire and people will want to support the underdog.

      Maybe that's the reason why the laws weren't changed, but it's not the reason Uber is getting shut down.

      They based their business model on breaking the law. When they were told they were breaking the law they ignored the authorities and kept on breaking it.

      There are times when you break laws as a matter of civil disobedience, and there are other times when you break them because they're really hard to follow. This was neither, this was Uber saying they know they're breaking the law with every transaction they make and they're going to keep on breaking the law until you legalize what they're doing because they're make more money that way. That's not how things work, if you pretend the law doesn't exist then you experience the consequences.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by l0ungeb0y ( 442022 )

      I can't help feel that its the established players who want to kill any newcoming competition. that - in itself - really annoys me.

      Is it that they want to kill competition or is it that they want Uber to abide by the same laws and regulations and pay the same taxes and fees that they do? Is it so annoying that Uber is being punished for not abiding by the laws? If you feel so, then you are an anarchist and opposed to a society based on law. Because only an anarchist sees no value in the rule of law. These laws aren't put into place to restrict competition, as much as they are for consumer protection. How many news articles have you re

      • by khallow ( 566160 )

        Is it that they want to kill competition or is it that they want Uber to abide by the same laws and regulations and pay the same taxes and fees that they do?

        I don't have any problems with Uber not following the same laws and regulations, the same taxes and fees as established oligopolies do. But then I don't have any problem with the established oligopolies not having to follow that crap either.

        These laws aren't put into place to restrict competition, as much as they are for consumer protection.

        I don't buy it. Maybe that was the intent at one time. It's just barrier to entry now.

        How many news articles have you read about Uber drivers raping or otherwise assaulting riders -- I can think of several off hand in the last year. How many news articles have you read about legally licensed cabbies doing the same?

        I guess Uber doesn't buy better press. Last I checked, rape was illegal in the countries mentioned in the story. Maybe these localities should enforce existing law, assuming there actua

      • by imunfair ( 877689 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @11:50PM (#49289479) Homepage

        It's definitely just a way to kill competition. The taxi companies are mad that Uber isn't buying million-dollar medallions for each taxi - which would make their business model completely un-viable.

        You want to know how to handle it properly and prevent crime? Look at what Portsmouth, NH did in response - not surprising since they're the home to the Free State Project. They disbanded the entire Taxi Comission and removed any extra restrictions on the normal cab companies that would prevent them from competing on a level playing field with Uber.

        This doesn't mean there are no regulations - it means that Uber drivers are required to pay for the cost of a background check by the police department, and provide proof of insurance. This cost is tiny in comparison to buying a medallion, and provides the same level of safety as the background checks the taxi companies were running.

        It's sad that a logical response by government is a surprise - adapting to changes while protecting citizens should be the basic mandate of government, not an exceptional feat.

        • by rsmith-mac ( 639075 ) on Thursday March 19, 2015 @12:37AM (#49289575)

          This doesn't mean there are no regulations - it means that Uber drivers are required to pay for the cost of a background check by the police department, and provide proof of insurance. This cost is tiny in comparison to buying a medallion, and provides the same level of safety as the background checks the taxi companies were running.

          Keep in mind however that only a handful of cities use Medallions. Outside of NYC and those other cities, Uber is getting busted for exactly what you propose: they refuse to do things like pay for police background checks and require drivers to hold a commercial driver's license. Uber is managing to break the law even in cities with a limited number of common sense laws.

          • Keep in mind however that only a handful of cities use Medallions.

            At least the medallion system, as abhorrent as it is, allows the licenses to be transfered to other individuals. In most other places its even worse than the medallion system where there not only is an artificially limited supply, you've got to also be on the good graces of the local bureaucrat gatekeeper when there is an opening.

        • by jklovanc ( 1603149 ) on Thursday March 19, 2015 @12:54AM (#49289607)

          Portmout, NH sa one [seacoastonline.com] Uber driver. The taxi business in a town of 20,000 is very different that in a city of 20,000,000.

        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          by QuasiSteve ( 2042606 )

          You want to know how to handle it properly and prevent crime? [...] disband the entire Taxi Comission and remove any extra restrictions on the normal cab companies

          So, to prevent crime... make the thing that was criminal, no longer criminal? Brilliant!

          Not saying it's a bad decision, mind you.

      • How many news articles have you read about Uber drivers raping or otherwise assaulting riders -- I can think of several off hand in the last year.
        How many news articles have you read about legally licensed cabbies doing the same?

        Just take your pick. [google.com] I'm not necessarily defending Uber, as they're not exactly a white knight in this story, but the notion that a government-issued license is going to somehow prevent sickos from assaulting women is naive.

        The popularity of Uber and the dissatisfaction of traditional taxi's customers clearly show that a better solution can and should be found, so that services like Uber can legitimately compete for services, while at the same time not eschewing reasonable safety regulations that other tax

    • by guises ( 2423402 ) on Thursday March 19, 2015 @12:18AM (#49289545)
      I know that established taxi companies are fighting this, and I'm sure that's a big part of why Uber is getting harassed, but Uber is a really sleazy company [nytimes.com]. If Uber were more sympathetic I imagine there'd be more of a push to defend them.

      Look at AirBNB. Same crowd-sourcing business plan, competing with heavily regulated established players, but a wholly more endearing image. They do get some guff, but no where near what Uber has been facing.
    • I know, licensing has a bit of a reason behind it, but still, I can't help feel that its the established players who want to kill any newcoming competition. that - in itself - really annoys me.

      I wonder if this will backfire and people will want to support the underdog.

      If you RTFA, you'll see that Uber is going to be doing business in accordance with the law, while this sorts out.

      The issue, it would seem, is that Uber is trying to do an end run around regulations. It's whether you accept the concept that they are not a taxi company, but a service connecting drivers and riders. The problem is, they collect 20 percent of the drivers fares.

      It takes a special kind of eel-snot slickness to try to make that argument, one that only anarchists and bottom of the barrel libert

    • That - in itself - really annoys me.

      Well, I'll guess you'll just have to get in line behind us folks who think that just because you come up with a business idea, you still shouldn't be able to ignore laws. But I guess that's just those of us who believe in civilization.

  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @10:11PM (#49289115)

    ignoring the law is not a good business strategy because you go to jail or at least court. they should have done what other companies do and buy some people in the government and have the laws changed in their favor.

    on second thought, maybe it's for the best.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @10:14PM (#49289119)

    Just know that Germany is extremely protectionist on many fronts. For instance, every household has to pay over 20 euro each month to the VERY WELL OFF TV companies whether you want to or not. Or if you have a painting and auction it off, a portion goes off to the artists and their families for several generations, (often to collection agencies since said artist is dead), regardless of how you bought the painting/artwork and the arrangement at time of purchase. Let's not mention how their RIAA (GEMA) was so greedy, they couldn't make a deal with youtube for videos. You can't even buy common off-the-shelf drugs that would cost $20 for a couple hundred in the US, but rather have to pay a pharmacy like a buck a piece for there.

    It's quite hostile to the free market on multiple fronts.

    • Just know that Germany is extremely protectionist on many fronts.

      Recent discussions on GEZ or GEMA do not make me feel that there are lots of fans of them. The problem is that nobody can suggest a workable alternative.

      But on-topic, Uber has to simply comply with the local law. The case in Frankfurt was heard in local court and its decision is only valid in state of Hessen. But the premise of the case was so simple that it didn't take long for judge to reach the verdict: Uber operates a taxi service, but doesn't comply with the relevant laws.

      Uber's case has nothing to

    • Just know that Germany is extremely protectionist on many fronts. For instance, every household has to pay over 20 euro each month to the VERY WELL OFF TV companies whether you want to or not. Or if you have a painting and auction it off, a portion goes off to the artists and their families for several generations, (often to collection agencies since said artist is dead), regardless of how you bought the painting/artwork and the arrangement at time of purchase. Let's not mention how their RIAA (GEMA) was so greedy, they couldn't make a deal with youtube for videos. You can't even buy common off-the-shelf drugs that would cost $20 for a couple hundred in the US, but rather have to pay a pharmacy like a buck a piece for there.

      It's quite hostile to the free market on multiple fronts.

      Eh, what? Medicine is free, your health insurance (provided for free, of course, by the government) will pay for pretty much any medicine out there. They also test that stuff way more than they do in the United States, and I've at least found it to work much better. And if you think Germany has a screwed up cable system, I assure you, it's nowhere near as bad as in the United States. They pay for it each month like you do - but they pay 80 dollars, or about 75 Euros, and it's of far worse quality.

  • http://www.ndtv.com/delhi-news... [ndtv.com]
    This driver has now confessed to having raped more women earlier, using the same modus operandi .
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @10:21PM (#49289163)
    on the one hand Uber screws their drivers marginally less than real taxi cab companies; OTOH there's evidence they're gonna start acting just as bad, and I really don't like how they're getting away with calling what are very, very obviously employees "Independent Contractors". I hired a contractor to fix my fence. The fence has a 10 year warrantee and will likely stand for 20 before it has to be replaced again. Uber needs drivers every day or they go out of business. If Uber can call their drivers "contractors" what's to prevent everyone using that loophole to ignore minimum wage law?
    • by Grishnakh ( 216268 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @10:45PM (#49289249)

      If Uber can call their drivers "contractors" what's to prevent everyone using that loophole to ignore minimum wage law?

      Technically, it's against IRS regulations, but in reality, tons of small businesses do this for years and nothing ever happens to them.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      If Uber can call their drivers "contractors" what's to prevent everyone using that loophole to ignore minimum wage law?

      I don't know about US Law, but in Canada, there are specific things that determine it for just this reason. A list of them is here: http://www.labour.gov.bc.ca/esb/facshts/employee.htm

      A few that sound like they apply to Uber:

      Control – Is the person under the direction and control of another regarding the time, place, and way in which the work is done?

      Ownership of tools – Does the person use tools, space, supplies and equipment owned by someone else? If so, this would indicate an employment rela

      • Control – Is the person under the direction and control of another regarding the time, place, and way in which the work is done?

        Uber drivers can only pick up passengers through the Uber system. They have to follow Uber rules of conduct. Check.

        Ownership of tools – Does the person use tools, space, supplies and equipment owned by someone else? If so, this would indicate an employment relationship.

        Uber drivers must use uber apps and Uber servers to communicate get fares. Check

        An Uber driver is much closer to a employee paid on commission than a contractor.

        • No, they are closer to a contractor, which is why they are self employed. All Uber provides is the platform.

          When I do contract work for a company I may be bound by that companies codes as well. Doesn't make me anything other than a contractor.

          • by jklovanc ( 1603149 ) on Thursday March 19, 2015 @01:28AM (#49289681)

            The quote about tools is incomplete. Here is the rest of it.

            However, it is recognized that some employers require employees to provide their own tools or vehicles.

            You completely ignore the fact that Uber controls who they pick up. Uber drivers are not allowed to work for Lyft while working for Uber and are not allowed to pick up street fares.

            A driver who is in his vehicle 10 hours a day five days a week picking up only Uber dispatched calls and who's only source of income is Uber is an Uber employee. Are all Uber drivers employees? Probably not. Are some Uber drivers Uber employees? Definitely.

            Uber does not want them designated as employees as they would have to give them things like holiday pay, minimum wage, EI payments, etc.

    • Reposting an older comment, because... well, why not.

      I've never understood how Uber drivers (or taxi drivers, for that matter) can even remotely be considered "independent contractors". The IRS says [irs.gov]:

      You are not an independent contractor if you perform services that can be controlled by an employer (what will be done and how it will be done). This applies even if you are given freedom of action. What matters is that the employer has the legal right to control the details of how the services are performed.

      Ube

    • by Pinhedd ( 1661735 ) on Thursday March 19, 2015 @03:56AM (#49290069)

      If Uber can call their drivers "contractors" what's to prevent everyone using that loophole to ignore minimum wage law?

      This is a great question, it comes up a lot more than one would normally think.

      Most jurisdictions have established legal tests to determine if the relationship between two individuals is an employment relationship (contract of service) or a contractual relationship (contract for service). Common elements of the tests are:

      1. Does the individual use his or her own equipment, or does the individual use equipment that is provided by the employer/contractee? If the individual uses his or her own equipment, then he or she is most likely a contractor.

      2. Does the individual have a duty to obey or does the employee/contractor have greater autonomy over the tasks that he or she chooses to perform? If the individual can choose when to work and selects work from a provided list of work orders then he or she is likely a contractor. If the individual is obligated to perform whatever tasks are assigned to him or her as long as they are within the parameters of a job description, then he or she is most likely an employee.

      3. Is there a framework for discipline? An employer can discipline an employee (within reason) according to company policy. A contractee cannot discipline a contractor; any grievances must be dealt with per the contract and disputes settled either by arbitration or in court. A contractee may of course ask a contractor to discipline his or her own employee.

      4. When does the legal relationship terminate? A contract for service nominally ends whenever the contracted service has been completed. A contract of service ends whenever the relationship is severed by those involved. Companies that hire individuals on a "renewable contract basis" and do not provide them with specific work that constitutes service often find themselves on the undesirable side of a court decision.

      There are many more elements involved and they do vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. In general though, the court will examine both the de-joure relationship and the de-facto relationship. When they do not align, the court often will decide in the best interest of the individual.

  • by Dorianny ( 1847922 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @10:31PM (#49289193) Journal
    Ubers plan for for entering a new markets has always been to start the service under the radar without asking permission. Once the have reached a certain number of users, a critical mass of sorts, they start advertising the service heavily relying on the user base to make a big stink if the regulatory agencies or courts try to stop them. In South Korea they went as far as offering free rides to everyone in order to keep in line with regulations but mostly to influence public opinion. The powers that be were clearly not amused.
  • by SpzToid ( 869795 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @10:42PM (#49289231)

    The Netherlands regulates taxis in order to maintain various standards of safety and fair competition. But Uber is an app that doesn't play by the rules. So they've been busted, several times.

    Initially the drivers received warnings.

    Then the fines started to increase, which Uber Corp. seems happy to pay. In January the penalties were 10,000 euros, and unlicensed drivers risk a criminal record:
    (in Dutch) http://www.nu.nl/internet/3978... [www.nu.nl]
    (English [google.com], machine translation)

    Did that stop Uber, even when they were warned the next time, and subsequent violations would become 100,000 euros. No way!
    (in Dutch) http://www.nrc.nl/nieuws/2015/... [www.nrc.nl]
    (English [google.com], machine translation)

    Uber defends itself by saying that innovation is faster than legislation. Uber says The Taxi Act of 2000, is outdated, and just keeps on truckin'

  • Does anyone here feel bad for the upper management of Uber or its CEO? Maybe the drivers and users should be felt for but I think we can agree that this is Karma for the people who run it.
  • Regulation (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Cruciform ( 42896 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2015 @11:38PM (#49289441) Homepage

    Funny how taxi companies seem to be more tightly regulated than banks.

  • Oligopoly (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jklovanc ( 1603149 ) on Thursday March 19, 2015 @12:12AM (#49289525)

    Taxis in most cities are oligopolies in that the business is controlled by a few companies. The reason oligopolies are created is that they are compensation for requirements put on them by the government. Here are a few examples of what taxi companies are required to do or have that Uber is not.
    1. Commercial licenses for drivers.
    2. Minimum number of cars on the road
    3. Vehicle inspections
    4. Insurance requirements.
    5. Minimum wage for drivers
    6. Minimum number of handicap accessible vehicles.
    7. Requirement to pick up anyone regardless of race, gender, sexual orientation, etc.
    8. Set rate fares
    9. Background checks
    10. Accountability for drivers' actions (Uber just throws their hands in the air and says "they are a contractor I have no control" while taxi companies get fined)
    11. Governance by a taxi board who decides on fines for poor service.
    The laws for taxis have grown through the years and no jurisdiction in their right mind would want to go back to the days of no taxi regulations.

    If Uber is allowed to flourish they may drive conventional taxis out of business. When the fad of driving for Uber fades we will be in a much worse situation.

  • Well many of us predicted this day was coming rapidly. You can't just ignore a countries laws because you don't like them and expect them to just sit idly by, especially after receiving so many warnings. I predict many more shutdowns and potentially arrests to come yet! and thoroughly deserved. No company should ever be permitted to make decisions on what laws to obey, It can be excusable for individuals out of protest etc, but companies get away with enough shit without allowing them to dictate which laws

  • Like a limo? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by WinstonWolfIT ( 1550079 ) on Thursday March 19, 2015 @02:39AM (#49289861)

    I know this has been discussed ad nauseum, but why can't they simply fall under limo laws? A limo can't be hailed, but can pick you up at the airport.

If all else fails, lower your standards.

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