Uber May Stop Letting Drivers See Destinations and Name Prices (sfchronicle.com) 141
An anonymous reader shares a report: A year ago, Uber let its California drivers see ride destinations before picking up passengers and let them set pricing in an effort to prove that the drivers were truly independent contractors. It was part of the company's strategy to block drivers from being reclassified as employees under AB5, California's gig-work law. Now, Uber is acknowledging that the move has hurt business and is considering axing its visible destinations and price-naming policies, The Chronicle has learned. The see-saw may disappoint drivers who appreciated that extra control over their work.
Too many drivers cherry-pick lucrative rides and decline other requests, making the service unreliable, the San Francisco company said on Monday. Uber no longer has to worry about proving that drivers are independent contractors, because Prop 22 -- the November ballot measure that Uber and fellow gig companies spent $220 million to pass -- enshrines their non-employee status.
Too many drivers cherry-pick lucrative rides and decline other requests, making the service unreliable, the San Francisco company said on Monday. Uber no longer has to worry about proving that drivers are independent contractors, because Prop 22 -- the November ballot measure that Uber and fellow gig companies spent $220 million to pass -- enshrines their non-employee status.
Ride-sharing (Score:5, Interesting)
When Uber started the whole point was that if two people were going to the same place anyway they could share the ride. Hence, ride-sharing.
How do you do that if you don't know where people need to go?
Switch the model (Score:4, Interesting)
far from their home base need an return trip pay (Score:2)
far from their home base need an return trip pay that covers time , miles and tolls.
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I thought Uber was more of a "become a limo driver" type pitch.
It was Lyft that pushed the narrative of "there's so many empty seats in cars, let's use money to facilitate car pooling".
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When Uber started the whole point was that if two people were going to the same place anyway they could share the ride. Hence, ride-sharing.
I don't think that was ever really the premise;they coined the term "ride sharing" as code for "a taxi service bu you use your own car"
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How do you do that if you don't know where people need to go?
It's almost as if Uber is a taxi company and not a "ride sharing" service.
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And if you believe(d) that, I have a bridge to sell you.
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I didn't. Too many people did.
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Uber is a regular livery service and should be regulated as such.
Most limo drivers work as independent contractors, and a CDL is usually not required if the GVW is under 16,000 lbs. So the same as Uber.
And Airbnb are hotels and should be regulated too.
Some Airbnbs are like hotels. Some are spare bedrooms in owner-occupied homes.
People need to demand it and vote for politicians that will cover it
As a voter, why should I care how Uber and Airbnb are regulated?
Re:Ride-sharing (Score:5, Insightful)
Uber is a taxi company without following any regulations or licensing that other companies must follow. I care because I pay more to the government than Uber currently does.
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Uber is a taxi company without following any regulations or licensing that other companies must follow.
Which makes them better in every way. This isn't an argument for regulating Uber, but a good argument for deregulating taxis.
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Re:Ride-sharing (Score:4, Interesting)
Uber(and its ilk) need more/better regulation.
Why? As a customer, how would I benefit from more regulation?
I would benefit most from more competition, which depends on fewer barriers to entry. So less regulation, not more.
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You could benefit by NOT DYING in a vehicle that was not maintained properly in order to save a few bucks.
You could benefit by not having a driver with invalid insurance destroying your car.
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You could benefit by NOT DYING in a vehicle that was not maintained properly in order to save a few bucks.
Some states require safety inspections for all cars. That makes more sense than a special regulation requiring safety only for Uber.
Other states no longer require safety inspections because there was no evidence that they prevented accidents or improved safety.
You could benefit by not having a driver with invalid insurance destroying your car.
We already have laws against driving without liability insurance. There is no need for an "only for Uber" regulation, especially since Uber already insures the cars while carrying passengers.
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You benefit from it if, for example, the regulations say the car's brakes need to work or the driver is not allowed to be a rapist out on parole.
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You benefit from it if, for example, the regulations say the car's brakes need to work
So do you think only cars used by Uber need to have safe brakes?
or the driver is not allowed to be a rapist out on parole.
Uber already does more thorough background checks than taxi companies.
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Let's get rid of all those pesky fire and building codes while we're at it. They do nothing but contribute to higher building costs.
chauffeur or taxi driver's license. is needed (Score:2)
chauffeur or taxi driver's license. is needed
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> As a voter, why should I care how Uber and Airbnb are regulated?
One word... glamping
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As a voter, why should I care how Uber and Airbnb are regulated?
Because how they are regulated effects your local economy, yourself, and your family.
Name your price (Score:2)
I can understand that, but if you're offering rides at a price that no drivers will take, doesn't that mean that the price is too low to provide service? Employees you can have do uneconomic work in the name of customer attraction and retention. IE give the occasional uneconomic(for the provider) ride in order to keep your name/application as the first one checked.
Contractors doing piecework need to be paid a realistic amount for every job.
Like most independent contractor jobs, you need to keep an iron gr
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So I guess they're employees after all (Score:5, Insightful)
Isn't that the point of being an INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR. You can refuse jobs. Sorry Uber, you're a fucking taxi service. These are your employees. Get over it.
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Isn't that the point of being an INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR. You can refuse jobs.
Drivers can still refuse jobs, they just have less information about the jobs. Heck, drivers don't have to work at all. They can work whenever they want. That where the employee/contractor line gets blurry. In general, if a company is telling you when to work, you are an employee. It's one of the criteria, anyways.
The Uber drivers I've talked too all say the main reason they drive for Uber is that they can set their own schedule.
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But the reverse is not true. Many exempt employees are not told when to work. That doesn't make them contractors.
Why do you guess that? (Score:2)
Isn't that the point of being an INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR. You can refuse jobs.
They can still refuse jobs. They just can't name prices for jobs they want to take. They choose to accept a fare requested.
Having been a contractor myself off and on, that sure sounds like a contractor to me. I could quit at any time, but I had to take the salary the job was offering or not. It wasn't like I could charge per UI element if desired.
Re:Why do you guess that? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Why do you guess that? (Score:4, Interesting)
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The "job" for transport is totally defined by 2 factors - Start point and End point. You cant hide 50% of the information and say that you have defined what the job is.
Again if the job is not defined how can you refuse it?
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It would be like you can come in anytime you want and any day you want... we will tell you when you can leave after you clock in.
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and then there are laws about min shift time and yes calling in to check if you are needed yes / no for an day = pay the min shift
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Most salesmen working on commission in Software sales totally control how many hours they will work. They get a base and a commission based on sales. They are still employees as they have to follow company rules.
I'm curious, do you even know what the requirements are to be an employee versus an independent contractor?
The general rule is that an individual is an independent contractor if the payer has the right to control or direct only the result of the work and not what will be done and how it will be done.
Most salesmen don't totally control how many hours they will work because they are still required to attend sales meetings, etc. If they have a base salary, then they will have a minimum number of hours they must work. They are also accountable for sales quota. They are provided tools: laptops, software, brochures, training, etc. They must adhere to the employee dress code. They are provided expenses.
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In the near future they can only refuse the pickup. Once they take the pickup, completely blind to what the job is other than the origin, they are contractually bound to complete it.
So no, they won't be able to refuse jobs in any meaningful sense.
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Exactly being able to set prices means you have pricing power, it does not really make you a contractor or not. I can't just decide my services are worth $600 tomorrow well not an expect to get any work anyway.
What is shitty about this from a drivers perspective is not knowing the destination means they don't know what the prospect of getting an pickup nearby for their return trip and they don't know the 'risk associated'. Personally I was never really interesting in driving for Uber but not knowing the des
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If your business model, fails to operate as it suppose to on paper. The problem is with the business model.
If they are not going to allow drivers pick and choose which jobs to take. They should factor in the price for the rider, the cost to return from home base, if such location is so many miles away their normal territory, So if you have to drive 30 miles out from the city to drop off some guy who got drunk at a bar. The drunk probably should be charged twice as much, and pay the driver for the return
I can request an Uber from LA to NY and they are l (Score:2)
I can request an Uber from LA to NY and they are locked into that trip?
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If I understand correctly it will still tell them its 4000mi or whatever; just not were. So they won't know if you are going to NYC or Richmond but they will know it will take a while.
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We've taken ubers from Stockton to San Francisco (85 miles), and Monterey to San Francisco before (115 miles), in an emergency. Was about $90 both times. Coming back from Monterey we split it two ways, from Stockton three ways, was pretty reasonable.
They bought a law (Score:2)
If they're doing this they feel confident that they can buy laws elsewhere (or just plain don't need to).
Remember, they're coming for us all [bloomberg.com]
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Wasn't there a big hulabaloo a few years back wherein the ride sharing apps *stopped* disclosing destinations to drivers, prior to them accepting the fare, because drivers were refusing rides to "bad" (i.e., Black) parts of town? And now they're doing the exact opposite, to try to give the drivers some de minimis amount of control so that they aren't subject to wage and hour laws?
Grounds to overturn Prop 22 (Score:5, Interesting)
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The general rule is that an individual is an independent contractor if the payer has the right to control or direct only the result of the work and not what will be done and how it will be done.
Drivers are being paid to pick up riders and drive them somewhere. The driver's are given a pick up location and a price for the ride. They are free to refuse the pickup. Drivers are free to take whatever route, to talk with the rider or not, etc. Technically, drivers are allowed to have a dirty vehicle and drive like a maniac although this may limit their future earning potential.
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Yeah, no. At the very best, we're talking about contracts of adhesion here since the "contractor" suddenly doesn't have a right to negotiate their price, and it can be argued that by not being able to see the destination, they don't even have a meaningful basis on which to decide, by being denied relevant information. At this rate, you m
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They'll just spend another half billion (Score:3)
There's a real "every man for himself" mentality that's built up over the last 40 years. It's being exploited and it's going to bite us all in the ass. No man is an island, and outside of a few top level geniuses individuals cannot effectively negotiate with mega corporations. And those geniuses are few and far enough between that they can be isolated and neu
From the article ... (Score:3)
So basically Uber drivers, when given the opportunity, immediately began acting like taxi drivers and pretty much negating the entire reason for using Uber in the first place.
If I have to hire a ride service that may or may not show up, and and may or may not choose to take me to my destination, what's the point? I'll drive myself. I certainly won't be calling a cab.
Uber and Lyft are popular for a reason, and it's not because people want them to behave more like standard taxi services.
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Re:From the article ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Not for profit (Score:2)
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I think of Uber and Lyft more as NGOs engaged in spreading Math literacy than as ride sharing companies. The only people who sign up are those bad at math.
Well, that is not quite true. I have a PhD in mathematics, and signed up to be a driver with Uber.
Your larger point still stands, though. As expected, I made fairly little money -- I was doing it for amusement value, unlike the overwhelming majority of rideshare drivers. It really was a fun way to spend some time during a mandatory non-compete period. I met interesting people, got some great restaurant recommendations, etc. (In that interlude, I also took motorcycle lessons, and generally crossed thing
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I'm not sure the overwhelming majority of rideshare drivers are doing it for the giggles. I'd guess there are more that are desperate for the immediate cash than there are looking to have a conversation while they ride out a non-compete.
I have zero research though and have only used rideshares a few times with somebody else that had the app so that's just my anecdote and supposition.
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oops - I misread your "unlike the overwhelming..." as "like the overwhelming" so my reply makes no sense :)
Re: From the article ... (Score:2)
It's not being bad at math (Score:2)
Uber is a payday loan where the interest is the miles on your car. Watch the adverts, they talk about how it helped the driver pay rent.
People know they're getting screwed, but you're making $8/hr, $15 if you're lucky and your kid needs antibiotics? Uber to the rescue, and more miles on your car praying it doesn't break down...
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The death of the taxicab industry had almost nothing to do with the prices they charged.
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Uber and Lyft are popular because they pay you to take their rides. You don't use a cab because you don't really want to pay the full price for someone to give you a ride.
Not even remotely true for (pre-COVID) business travelers. I didn't particularly care how much a cab or Uber cost. It's all about the convenience, reliability and service.
If you ignore the condition of the cars, cabs are perfectly fine going from the hotel to where you need/want to go. The problem is getting back. Maybe you'll be able to wave a cab down. Maybe the cab will bother to show up if you call and order one directly. It's a total crapshoot...
Uber/Lyft eliminates all those pain points utterly. Not o
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Conversely, if I have to haul your ass somewhere for a pittance, especially after subtracting the costs which Uber graciously passes onto the drivers, I'll rather open a can of beer.
Uber basically demonstrates a trivial economic truth - if you fix the price for a service at a level where it just isn't worth i
Cherrypicking (Score:2)
Too many drivers cherry-pick lucrative rides and decline other requests, making the service unreliable,
They should respect that some destinations may be problematic for some drivers. So why not solve that problem by cherry-picking which drivers get first dibs on more lucrative rides?
Something like.. an algorithm should estimate a "favorability" score, and drivers who have a high acceptance and successful completion rate get offered more favorable rides first. Have drivers that decline or pass up on
Re:Cherrypicking is NECESSARY (Score:4, Interesting)
Have drivers that decline or pass up on a lot of rides get downgraded in some manner that will hurt their ability to cherry-pick.
So when a19 year old girl driving for Uber is forced to take a ride into gang territory.... Cherrypicking isn't just about pricing/earnings.
Re: Cherrypicking is NECESSARY (Score:2)
What difference does the sex of the driver make? The correct answer is none whatsoever.
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Your sex matters:
- when you have to stay late at work and then take a long walk to your car after most others have left.
- when you are jogging at night
- when it's raining and you're wandering if you can take a shortcut through an alley
- when you're going to the bathroom at a bar
- when you're meeting someone new for a Craigslist/etc trade
- when you're negotiating salary
- when you're driving to a seedy part of town to pick someone up or drop someone off
Sure the potential bad outcomes could also occur to men,
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Right its almost as if people are not the same. Women get some advantages, men get some advantages.
Somethings are not about fairness they are just about reality. A 85lbs person of small stature is simply more likely to be targeted because they are less likely to be able to defend themselves effectively against a say a 160lb assailant. So if your looking for people to mug in the dark you probably attack smaller people - who disproportionately will be women and not because of some grand institutional-sexism b
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Obvious solution for everyone (Score:2)
Would be for Uber to "evolve" into an online marketplace for anyone to sell taxi services, including taxi companies. I would assume that if they did that, they could easily stick a hot poker in the eye of every regulator.
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Other demotivators (Score:3)
Or perhaps, some drivers don't want to go to sketchier parts of town.
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Are taxi drivers allowed to refuse those fares?
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If driving for Uber is so bad, why do it? (Score:2)
Thousands of people drive for Uber around the world. If driving for Uber is so bad, why do people do it? (Don't tell me they have to. There are plenty of other low wage jobs they could do in America.)
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Re: If driving for Uber is so bad, why do it? (Score:2)
Re:If driving for Uber is so bad, why do it? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Uber to be viable needs a recession.
No. It just needs people who want to make some extra money driving their cars.
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Don't tell me they have to.
Is that assuming away the correct answer? Is someone holding a gun to their head saying they must drive for Uber rather than, say, flipping burgers, washing dishes in a restaurant, or digging ditches? I know for a fact that working as an industrial electrician apprentice pays more than minimum wage but it also requires doing things like using a pickaxe to dig through hard pack.
Now, explain why someone has to driver for Uber rather than working as a janitor, flipping burgers, washing dishes, working day l
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And yet they still claim it's ride sharing (Score:2)
How can I decide to share a ride if I don't know where you want to go until I pick you up? What if the grocery store I was going to is in the other direction?
Yet, somehow I don't think Uber would get many customers if passengers only have the option to be dropped off somewhere within a mile of whatever route the driver was planning to take.
So there you have it, Uber is an illegal unlicensed cab company.
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They could, but they don't. Because they're not actually a ride-share, they're an illegal taxi service.
just rename it gypsy cab! (Score:2)
just rename it gypsy cab!
Ah yes, the race to the bottom (Score:2)
reap what y'all sowed: lower pay for everyone
Employees (Score:2)
That's what they are. They're part-time, on-call employees.