Uber Loses License To Operate in London, One of Its Biggest Markets (venturebeat.com) 109
Uber has lost its license to operate in London, one of its biggest markets globally, with a local transport regulator reaffirming a previous claim that Uber is not a "fit and proper" operator. From a report: The regulator also found that Uber's systems are "easily manipulated" by unauthorized drivers. The announcement follows a two-year battle with Transport for London (TfL) that kicked off back in September 2017, when the local transport regulator ruled that Uber failed to take sufficient "corporate responsibility" when it came to safety and security. Concerns included its approach to reporting crimes and its process for driver background checks. Although TfL conceded that Uber has since made some "positive changes," the regulator identified a continued "pattern of failures," including "breaches that placed passengers and their safety at risk." "As the regulator of private hire services in London, we are required to make a decision today on whether Uber is fit and proper to hold a licence," said Helen Chapman, TfL's director of licensing, regulation, and charging. "Safety is our absolute top priority. While we recognize Uber has made improvements, it is unacceptable that Uber has allowed passengers to get into minicabs with drivers who are potentially unlicensed and uninsured."
Good (Score:2)
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Yeah, fewer options are better. Get rid of Lyft too.
Re:Good (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: Good (Score:5, Insightful)
This explanation is presented in simple terms, appearing to be for the reader's benefit, but actually reveals a shockingly naive understanding how transactions work.
The "government" in this explanation gets involved because not all the terms of the transaction can (or should) be negotiated for every taxi ride. Do you think Person A and B should discuss the appropriate level of insurance coverage and liability for every ride? Or do you think there should there be some minimum standard in place? Who enforces that?
And "reviews" are the "safest system"? Really? You don't think doing a background check on a person's actual driving record of accidents and previous arrests would be safer than whether or not some people tapped 5-stars for a "clean car" and "fun conversation"?
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This explanation is presented in simple terms, appearing to be for the reader's benefit, but actually reveals a shockingly naive understanding how transactions work.
No doubt. It was a simplification.
The "government" in this explanation gets involved because not all the terms of the transaction can (or should) be negotiated for every taxi ride. Do you think Person A and B should discuss the appropriate level of insurance coverage and liability for every ride? Or do you think there should there be some minimum standard in place? Who enforces that?
And that is the crux of the disagreement, isn't it: who decides? I and many others think it's perfectly reasonable to let market forces to regulate behavior. I trust that much more than I trust government regulators.
If you personally prefer government regulation (knock yer socks off, your preferences don't need to match mine), aren't there much lighter hands we can apply instead of "get a government and protected incumbents stamp of approval or nothing" approach? Perhaps le
Re: Good (Score:5, Insightful)
And that is the crux of the disagreement, isn't it: who decides?
The electorate.
I and many others think it's perfectly reasonable to let market forces to regulate behavior.
So what you're saying is if I get mown down by a driver who's incentivised to work 32 hours straight then I should vote with my pound and do what exactly? Pay someone else to mow me down instead?
I trust that much more than I trust government regulators.
That's a prevaricatory answer. You don't really: you support some sort of government regulation to protect enough rules that you believe market forces can do the rest. Well guess what, so do I. You're simply drawing the line in a slightly different place, but claiming that the free market will sort it out. You should state what, specifically and what evidence you have to support it.
If you personally prefer government regulation (knock yer socks off, your preferences don't need to match mine), aren't there much lighter hands we can apply instead of "get a government and protected incumbents stamp of approval or nothing" approach?
See, if you're going to argue vociferously, you should do it from the point of knowledge not astounding ignorance. What incumbents? Any yahoo in London can apply to be a minicab drive and go solo or pool with one of the many hundred (or thousand?) minicab companies. Or you can do the knowledge, get a black cab and go solo, rent one from a garage and/or pool in with a company and also get a license for private hire.
You are arguing from the point of view that regulations == monopoly incumbent without realising that there is no incumbent in London. There are thousands of taxis and PHVs in the hands of both private individuals and companies.
If the ratings are so useful, people will flock to vendors who proudly display the GRSoA sticker, won't they?
Sure because rating are completely beyond reproach and very reliable.
But don't force your preference on me.
Your preference endangers me and causes congestion on roads that we share, so yes I will limit you preference.
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naive means wrong, not simplified
naive is correct. your simplification causes incorrect results
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naive means wrong, not simplified
naive is correct. your simplification causes incorrect results
Well, it's not my simplification but no matter. In what way is it incorrect? Not that you don't prefer the results, in what way is it incorrectly describing reality?
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Also, if an uninsured unlicenced Über driver crashes into me, that is a problem even though I've never used their services.
Re: Good (Score:5, Insightful)
The thing is that, if person B does not have a private hire vehicle licence and commercial motor insurance in the UK, person B is driving illegally and uninsured. Thus when person B causes an accident with innocent driver person E,- person E's losses are not covered nor are any damages incurred by person A.
Not only that, but person F who drives a taxi legally has gone out of business because person B was able to undercut person F on price.
so sorry we have laws... (Score:2)
... but get used to it.
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Reviews are a reactionary "safety" system at best. That means that, at least, one person has to suffer a bad experience for others to gain a benefit. More likely several people since who ever pays attention to a single bad review?
In addition, reviews can be gamed and manipulated.
So to assert that reviews is the "safest system" is just being disingenuous.
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I've personally found reviews to be bar-none, the worst "safety system" out there. At least go with an independent review agency like Diamond Certified or Angie's List.
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If it ain't so in your opinion, then why are Uber creating conditions whereby unqualified people can drive and became a danger to their passengers? Unqualified means cheaper, and endangering the passengers means ignoring the rule of law.
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Um, where did I say that? Uber is a public danger and paying $2 an hour and ignoring the law in London. Also they have a plan to become a cab monopoly world wide. That is why they lost their license in London.
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$2? In London? Obvious bullshit.
No, according to TFA, Uber failed to take sufficient “corporate responsibility” — a rule so vague as if deliberately designed to help protect both traditional taxis.
And their government regulators too — because who needs them, if, instead of filing a complaint, I can simply give a bad driver a bad review?
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Not sure. I heard on the Internet they were paying $2 an hour in London. I wonder why they had so many drivers? I guess a lot of people like to make $2 an hour.
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But Uber doesn't cover the cost of gas. That comes out of a driver's pockets.
If gasoline costs $5.75 / gallon (current London prices) and drivers make $2 / hr... it seems like the drivers would be likely operating at a loss. They would have more money in their pockets by doing nothing at all. That $2 / hr cost couldn't possibly be right.
Re:Good (Score:4, Informative)
Corporate responsibility refers to some specific rules that minicab companies are required to abide by.
- Drivers must be properly vetted.
- Drivers must have the correct insurance and equipment
Those things are for passenger safety, developed over decades to address problems that keeps reoccurring. All Uber needs to do is meet this minimum requirements, but it won't because it doesn't want to be an employer.
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Yes.
Get rid of every company that want's to pay employees 2 dollars an hour and ignore the rule of law.
There are hundreds of legitimate, insured, licensed taxi operators out there.
Do you actually know anything about taxi's in London? Like...at all? London is well known for having very high requirements for their Taxi's. Uber came in and greatly disrupted that ... which isn't necessarily bad. Requiring your taxi drivers actually know all the crazy, twisted roads in London is less crucial in the days of GPS.
But then allowing for unlicensed and uninsured drivers on top of that? That's pure corporate greed putting profits and the ability to operate over enforcing reasonable safety p
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Right. While I am glad Uber and Lyft exist (Taxis in South Florida have never been known for safety, promptness or professional behavor, but have been known for $70 rides that should have ben $20) I'd place TfL and the Black cabs as excellent from my experiences working in London several years ago. Compared to everyplace else I've lived where there really were no reasonable choices tor transit.
I'm not going to get on the side of the several Cab company shills and apparent former taxi drivers that are sad th
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Regulator, not judge (Score:4, Informative)
The London's case is an example of the government's tyranny — with the regulator being both the lawmaker and the judge
Uber have a right of appeal to Westminster Magistrates Court within 21 days of Transport for London's decision not to renew their Private Hire Vehicle operator's licence.
Uber have used that right more than once within the last 18 months and I expect they will again.
the cited transgression so vague (Uber failed to take sufficient “corporate responsibility”) as to be meaningless.
Er, from TfL's statement today
https://tfl.gov.uk/info-for/media/press-releases/2019/november/uber-london-limited-found-to-be-not-fit-and-proper-to-hold-a-private-hire-operator-licence
A key issue identified was that a change to Uber's systems allowed unauthorised drivers to upload their photos to other Uber driver accounts.
This allowed them to pick up passengers as though they were the booked driver, which occurred in at least 14,000 trips - putting passenger safety and security at risk.
This means all the journeys were uninsured and some passenger journeys took place with unlicensed drivers, one of which had previously had their licence revoked by TfL.
Hardly 'vague. or 'meaningless'
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That's nice...
A software bug?.. Please, happens to everyone.
It is both — allowing the government to pull a license from anyone in their sole judgement.
And the bigger question, of course, is why do
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And the bigger question, of course, is why do I need a permission from the government to offer somebody a ride to begin with?
Feel free to offer anyone a ride, as far as I know it's legal anywhere. If you take compensation for that ride, that, in most places, would (or should) be illegal. Now if you want to split hairs & talk about your elderly friend who pays you to take him to the doctor, that would be quite different than offering rides to strangers for cash.
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They get their day in court. You really don't need to lay on the melodramatic language of 'tyranny'.
BTW, the law regulating minicabs in London is laid out by national government in the Private Hire Vehicles (London) Act 1998. TfL is the regulator, but not the 'lawmaker'.
In short, if you are going to comment, get your facts right.
A software bug?.. Please, happens to everyone.
One that was exploited by drivers on 14,000 occasions. Not a great look for a company that touts itself as software outfit, even if it is really just a taxi firm.
And the bigger question, of course, is why do I need a permission from the government to offer somebody a ride to begin with?
Wow, you have reall
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With the amount of discretion they're given by the law, the distinction is without difference.
The quoted figure is 14,000 rides — not 14,000 fraudulent drivers. Of the riders abusing the bug they found 43 [nytimes.com].
That's 43 out of over 100,000 — you'd denounce anyone proposing a crackdown on i
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And the 2,000 other minicab firms in London have zero cases of this happening.
Re: Regulator, not judge (Score:2)
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Yes, none of these activities should require a government's permission either.
Irrelevant.
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And the bigger question, of course, is why do I need a permission from the government to offer somebody a ride to begin with?
You're right: democracy sucks. We should have a dictatorship that only does everything correctly as determined by you. People should not collectively be able to choose the level of regulation.
Also you've really upped your game with your sig. It's even more incoherent than before, something I thought wasn't possible. Well done!
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False dilemma.
No, not by me — how about each person making their own decision? Dislike Uber — don't ride with them, simple, huh? But not good enough for you, little tyrants, is it? If you hate something, you want it illegal for everyone...
Absolutely not — the Glorious Collective deciding,
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No, not by me â" how about each person making their own decision? Dislike Uber â" don't ride with them, simple, huh? But not good enough for you, little tyrants, is it?
No it isn't. If some dumbass without a drivers license working 32 hours straight runs me over then I have no say in the decision. I am exactly the kind of tyrant who will lock those up who try to enact their beliefs that they have a right to swing their fists regardless of where my nose happens to be. Odd that you don't.
If you hate
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Life is full of dangers — the same dumbass could've run you over driving home inebriated. That's not a reason to preemptively violate his freedom and that of thousands of others.
When that dystopian movie (with Matt Damon, whom else?) introduced the public to the concept of pre-crime [wikipedia.org], you were appalled, no doubt. But here you're advocating the same thing convinced of your own righteousness
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Life is full of dangers â" the same dumbass could've run you over driving home inebriated.
Indeed and so we don't need large venture capital funded companies to incentivise risky behaviour.
That's not a reason to preemptively violate his freedom and that of thousands of others.
Yes it is.
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Wrong movie, nitwit.
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Uber does not do that. A whopping 43 of 100K+ drivers were found to be abusing their system.
So you're fine with the pre-crime concept — just as I suspected...
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So you're fine with the pre-crime concept â" just as I suspected...
If you want to call endangerment "pre-crime" then that's up to you. Personally, I recognise that we don't live in a vacuum and that when our actions affect others either directly or statistically, we don't have a right to do whatever we wish.
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There is no endangerment. You're just claiming, without even any evidence, that
That's "pre-crime" — you may have never unduly endangered anyone, but just in case you might, serviscope_minor requires you to get a permission from him to pursue happiness a certain way.
Worse — the fictiona
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There is no endangerment. You're just claiming, without even any evidence,
Just because you think I should accept the risks so you can get the services you want doesn't make you correct. Maybe you think I should accept the risks. Maybe you're right. How about we put it to the voting public to decide?
Oh wait we already did and now here we are.
That's "pre-crime" â" you may have never unduly endangered anyone,
Apparently, only things you personally consider to be a risk should be considered a risk.
Worse
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Once we even allow the hypothetical increase of danger to enter into consideration, we never stop until there is no freedom left — and we've been traveling down that road for a while now (UK even further ahead than the US).
Consider alcohol — consuming it increases the risk of drunk driving, which in turn gravely endangers innocent bystanders. Shall we ban alcohol (again)? Same logic was
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Once we even allow the hypothetical increase of danger to enter into consideration
All danger is hypothetical until someone gets hurt. That's why it's danger, not assault/roat traffic accident/murder/etc. It is a well known fact that motor vehicles are a major source of accidents and injuries. Be intellectually honest and admit that you're simply drawing the threshold for sufficiently dangerous in a different place from me.
(UK even further ahead than the US). Consider alcohol â" consuming it increases
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The glorious collective is built on the freedom of association. Why do you hate freedom of other people?
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The chief magistrate's husband is a shareholder in Über, and she gave them a favourable judgement. This time, she won't be allowed to hear the case.
Re:Good (Score:4, Insightful)
Because it is bad for society as a whole. Do you really want a race to the bottom, at the end of which, you are also earning $2/hour?
$2/hour leads to more inequality, with a small number of ever-richer people. That change will reduce the real living standards of everyone other than that tiny few ultra-wealthy. It will eventually reduce your standard of living.
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Do you understand that short-term changes can have wider long-term consequences? Why do you guys keep ignoring that fact?
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Uber's business plan is to become a cab monopoly world wide. The more Uber succeed, the less options we are going to have, and in the end, the more we are going to pay.
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Exactly. That is why we should get rid of Uber (and Lyft too). Either of them might succeed. We should get rid of Yellow Cab too. They might have the same plan.
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Uber could have stayed in London if they followed the rules. They are not that much hard to follow. Just don't let a non-driver use someone else' identity to drive.
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Exactly. That is why they lost their license in London. They let non-drivers use someone else's identity to drive (plus they have a business plan to become a cab monopoly and they pay $2 per hour and ignore the rule of law).
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Even assuming that they did succeed and they manage to drive all co
Re:Good (Score:5, Interesting)
That may legitimately have been their plan (and it's a stupid one in general), but so far all they've managed to do is lose billions of investors' dollars. If they ever did manage to capture 100% of the market, what ability do they have to stop a competitor from entering the market
Well, what happens is that the monopoly cross-subsidises from areas not under threat. So, for example, if they have a grip in India and some rival enters the market in Brazil, they just stop charging for rides in Brazil but keep paying the drivers until the competitor dies out. Do that a few times and people stop trying to get into the market.
This was how the UK bus market was bought up by Stagecoach under Thatcher - the big fan of free-markets that she was - and that's why the regulators in London are so wary: they know how this works.
Uber (the company) has the problem that it's not profitable enough to do this yet - they over-stretched. Uber the company board don't give a shit one way or the other as they're stuffing the investors' cash into their pockets as fast as they can before the music stops, same as Netfix's. They'll move on and spend the rest of their lives getting cushy non-exec posts in companies on the back of their very big, very public failure from all the other lawyers, consultants and suchlike parasites that made some money off Uber before it was wound up and the name sold to some rich neo-nazi group somewhere.
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That may legitimately have been their plan (and it's a stupid one in general), but so far all they've managed to do is lose billions of investors' dollars.
We call that buying market share. It's part of the plan. You put the competition out of the market by offering lower prices. And when you are alone you raise prices higher than they were before.
If they ever did manage to capture 100% of the market, what ability do they have to stop a competitor from entering the market outside of getting the government to give them the same kind of legal monopoly that taxi services enjoyed that spurred the creation of Uber in the first place?
A huge one. A competitor wouldn't have any drivers, because all the riders would be on Uber, and have Uber's application installed.
A competitor wouldn't have any riders, because all the drivers would be on Uber, and have Uber's application installed.
If a competitor tried to enter the market in city XYZ, Uber would si
Re: Good (Score:5, Insightful)
You're sarcastically assuming that the options are roughly equal valid, and of course they are not. Uber subsidizes every ride (which it can't do forever), and they are still unable to pay drivers anything close to a living wage. At the same time they fight against regulations (like driver background checks) that were put in place for good reasons. (And not to remove these regulations from the taxi industry overall mind-you, but just for themselves.)
Uber is not a white-knight saving people from the high prices of an over-regulated taxi industry.. They are temporarily under-cutting a market to sell a worse service while waving their hands and claiming "technological progress". Their chief innovation is shifting all of the associated risks and capital investment of maintaining a fleet of taxis and drivers to the drivers themselves.. which isn't even clever innovation as much cynically exploiting a loophole in labor employment laws.
Re: Good (Score:1)
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We don't have Uber or Lyft, and mid week at 1 or so in the afternoon it can take an hour to get a cab. I am not the younger generation but I wan't more service. I shouldn't have to wait an hour it is rediculous. Last Xmas party some people waited 3+ hours for the taxi.
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I've used taxis in cities just fine as well. Uber (and Lyft, etc) are VASTLY SUPERIOR in so many ways. They have tracking apps, they're safer, they're cheaper, I've never been robbed at gunpoint in an uber like I have in a taxi (and that shit of course doesn't even make local news, while if it ever happens in Ubers its international news).
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I've used taxis in cities just fine as well. Uber (and Lyft, etc) are VASTLY SUPERIOR in so many ways. They have tracking apps, they're safer, they're cheaper, I've never been robbed at gunpoint in an uber like I have in a taxi (and that shit of course doesn't even make local news, while if it ever happens in Ubers its international news).
I would absolutely *love* to hear your explanation about what it is that Uber or Lyft are doing that make them inherently less likely to involve a robbery. Someone inclined to to do this has a way easier time logging onto an app than getting hired on at a taxi service. I'm not saying cab companies are the exemplars of cautious employment practices, but it's a hell of a lot higher bar than the one Uber and Lyft are using. Also, of course ridesharing companies provide a cheaper product - they aren't paying
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Yeah, fewer options are better. Get rid of Lyft too.
Less traffic congestion [slashdot.org] too.
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Yeah, fewer options are better. Get rid of Lyft too.
So there would only be 9998 different taxi companies left in London?
the same thing happens in NYC (Score:5, Interesting)
I personally know of people who have an uber account and a car and lease their car to other people while they sleep to keep the car making money. the person I know I think he has a TL&C license to drive a cab but doesn't have his own uber car or account and uses someone else's and pays for that time he drives
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Government doesn't exist to pick winners and losers in the market, especially when those winners make donations to the politicians protecting them.
profit over people (Score:2, Flamebait)
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I dunno what they hate about Uber, I think the ridesharing service is the best thing since sliced bread.
Now, anytime I want to go out and have drinks, (which in New Orleans is pretty 99.99999% of the time)....I no longer have to worry about getting pulled over by the cops, I just easily uber to and from.
I also like it is door-to-door, so, no parking hassles, and the app is easy to use.
I just
Re:profit over people (Score:5, Insightful)
The convenience of Ubers system and App was the key USP originally (since copied). The app made it very easy to call a car to get you somewhere, and reduced the time it took to call an old school taxi company to then send out a car to pick you up. A clear advantage to traditional bricks and mortar taxi/car company.
But Uber is overreaching. London has had the minicab system for decades, and it is a relatively competitive landscape with a minimal yet effective regulatory framework. Instead of focusing on the USP of the app and large responsive fleet, while meeting the basic legal requirements in both licensing drivers and minimum wages, they've tried to get around the legal requirement to give them even more of a competitive advantage. In the end, what they are offering in London is a better online managed minicab experience, and they should accept that they aren't special and so have to respect the legal requirements to operate in London.
Re: profit over people (Score:2)
I think you will find the regulatory landscape in London is rather different to that in New Orleans
Besides, we have fairly decent public transport
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New Orleans also has 'fairly decent public transport' aswell, btw. This coming from someone who lived in London, and visited NO for 'a while'
They have cabs, buses and additionally.. a quaint above-ground tram system which is pretty extensive too. That's a damn site more than most US cities I can tell you. There's really very little need for an Uber operation in NO unless you're like the poster above and like 'door-to-door' and can't be arsed to wait for a regular cab.
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Well.....kinda.
NOLA has the old stre
Re:profit over people (Score:5, Informative)
"I just don't get the 'hate' some people and apparently cities have for it."
It's pretty simple. Uber is a shitty company.
Uber has had a cavalier attitude towards the law, often breaking it brazenly.
It's been involved in countless scandals, from having uber drivers deliberately request and cancel rides from competing companies to disrupt their services, to operating driverless cars without any sort of adequate controls or monitoring, to spying on law enforcement regulators to avoid them and various other abuses of privacy perpetrated via the app.
It's simply dumping VC money to grab market share; so its not competing on any sort of sustainable business model.
It has lousy corporate ethics even by the standards of corporate ethics. HR scandal after scandal, sexual harrasment, a tech-bro-corporate-culture...
People don't generally hate 'ride-hailing' companies; they just hate 'uber' speciffically. Lyft, and uber's other competitors simply are less obnoxious and toxic companies.
I remember cabs...they used to take forever to get to you, often run down and smelly
Nobody is going to argue that a monopoly taxi company was better, or that the taxi industry didn't need a shake out. But that doesn't mean we should settle for uber's nonsense either.
I had one once that had some sort of medical tubes running out of him into something in the front seat.....
And what? He shouldn't be allowed to work, or come into contact with the public? What is your argument here?
"Most every Uber I get into is clean, smells fresh, many offer bottled water, etc and are very plesant people."
Except that's not 'uber'. That's a local independent contractor trying to earn some money honestly. Nobody hates them.
You're basically doing the equivalent of judging microsoft as a corporation based on the fact that the local PC builder you deal with does great work.
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You make a lot of sense. But really, most people don't know the information about the Uber corporation that you do. Most Londoners prefer Uber over taxis, and people are pissed.
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TfL's director of licensing, regulation, and charging. "Safety is our absolute top priority. "... therein lies the discrepancy, Uber's ONLY responsibility or corporate concern is to become profitable.
"...to become profitable by offering a valuable service at a price customers are willing to voluntarily pay, while paying drivers a wage they are willing to accept."
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IIUC, that's not required to be a cab driver in London, but only to be a "black cab" driver. London has a two step qualification for being a cab driver.
Uber lost their license in London..? (Score:2)
Finances (Score:2)
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Well the plan was to lose money on every ride, but make it up on volume. So some pretty big bribes are in order.
What is the practical outcome? (Score:2)
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Uber will appeal, and kick the can down the road for as long as possible. If they keep doing this for long enough, they will eventually stop appealing and change their argument to "well that was two years ago, we are all different now".
I believe the shortest time scale for Uber to stop operating is a month or two.
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I don''t think so. Two years ago, Uber kicked the can down the road with an appeal. Having failed to improve sufficiently, Uber loses it's license at midnight tonight.
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Uh, no. I (and the linked article) are wrong:
"legislation means that Uber now has 21 days to appeal, during which it can continue to operate pending any appeal and throughout any potential appeals process. Uber may seek to implement changes to demonstrate to a magistrate that it is fit and proper by the time of the appeal." [tfl.gov.uk]
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Uber is appealing (again). Some bribe money will be issued to the right people and the situation will resolve itself eventually.
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Warning, if you continue like this, I may have to revoke your foe status and make you neutral.
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If and when Uber loses its final appeal and actually has to stop operating in London, the drivers will probably all sign up to on or other of the Uber alternatives operating in the city, such as Bolt or Kapten. I'd bet that pretty much every Uber driver has already scoped out the options and done any preliminary steps, so that when the times comes, they can switch apps as seamlessly as possible.
If you really lived in London... (Score:3)
... you'd use the tube, train or at a push the bus. No sane person drives around it unless its going around suburbs as its just way too slow and there's usually nowhere to park when you get to your destination anyway.
Compared to Taxi Companies? (Score:2)
If drivers for taxi dispatchers were regularly found to be letting their friends borrow their license, stick a photo of themselves over top of it, and drive cabs, who would be punished? Would TfL be kicking out the dispatcher, or going after the drivers?
The taxi operator has an obligation to take reasonable steps to prevent this sort of abuse now that it's been brought to their attention, but the culpable party here seems to be those who are breaking the law and driving without the appropriate license.
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If drivers for taxi dispatchers were regularly found to be letting their friends borrow their license, stick a photo of themselves over top of it, and drive cabs, who would be punished? Would TfL be kicking out the dispatcher, or going after the drivers?
Because of the way it works in the UK and how the badges are made the driver would lose his, both the driver and the faker would face criminal charges and the taxi company could well lose its licence too.
Minicab (Score:5, Interesting)
So just to be clear. This isn't about protecting Black Cabs, which are the iconic ones you all know about London. They are highly trained drivers, well-vetted drivers with extensive training and local knowledge, and are the only taxis allowed to take people hailing them on the street.
It is about making sure Uber follows the rules established for "minicabs", which in London often small companies with several registered drivers, that are able to take orders for cabs to be picked up and dropped off at defined locations all handled by a central office. Traditionally you would call a central office, give your name and asked to be picked up from somewhere and be dropped off somewhere. So you can't just flag one down, but the drivers are still vetted for criminatlity and fitness to operate a taxi by a private hire licence system, and who the drivers pick up is controlled and recorded at a central office.
Uber was operating as a massive minicab firm, with the app taking the place of the pick up and drop off phone call to the central office. Where they have been failing is in ensuring their drivers were properly vetted and have a private hire driver licence, and they haven't addressed it to TFL satisfaction. The driver being able to change their photo without Uber verifying it matched to the private hire licence is bad, and by the sounds of it Uber haven't been regularly checking the drivers are still holding valid licences or insurance.
In terms of a driver getting a licence details are available here:
https://tfl.gov.uk/info-for/taxis-and-private-hire/licensing/private-hire-driver-licence
The costs isn't outrageous, and it is primarily around ensuring the driver is not a criminal and fit and able to drive a taxi.
Re: (Score:2)
The cost of the licence isn't outrageous, but you also need commercial vehicle insurance. I'd imagine that will be abit more expensive than normal motor insurance.
Re: (Score:2)
Uber is now useless in NYC (Score:2)
In New York City, my Uber rides are now way too expensive due to new regulations. Seems every ride I take in Manhattan is $50+. Basically useless. Going back to taking the subway...sorry Uber drivers!