company:uber

  • Accident mortel en Uber autonome : la voiture a vu la victime et a choisi de l’ignorer
    https://www.numerama.com/tech/366846-accident-mortel-en-uber-autonome-la-voiture-a-vu-la-victime-et-choi

    L’accident mortel causé par une voiture autonome de la société Uber n’est pas lié à un défaut de vision du véhicule, mais plus à un choix du système d’ignorer la victime. D’après le média américain The Information, Uber sait désormais pourquoi une de ses voitures autonomes a eu un accident avec une piétonne traversant la route, causant sa mort. L’événement tragique n’aurait pas été lié à un défaut de vision du véhicule : les nombreux capteurs qui équipent les taxis autonomes de Uber actuellement en test sont en (...)

    #Uber #voiture #éthique #algorithme

    • Malheureusement, les ingénieurs d’Uber auraient été trop optimistes dans leurs réglages et le système de faux positifs s’est retrouvé à ignorer de véritables dangers. C’est ce qu’il s’est passé lors de l’accident qui a eu lieu un peu plus tôt dans l’année. La voiture a vu la piétonne poussant son vélo sur une voie rapide, mais n’a pas choisi d’ajuster sa trajectoire ou de freiner : elle a considéré ce qu’elle a vu comme un élément qui ne présentait pas de danger immédiat.

      La raison évoquée par nos confrères pour cette configuration malheureuse est tragique : Uber est une entreprise de transports de passager et elle fait tout pour que la conduite autonome de ses véhicules soit confortable. Cela signifie que les paramètres de le conduite autonome sont ajustés avant toute chose pour que le transport soit agréable.

    • Les capteurs sont en connexion directe avec le contrat d’assurance relié lui même aux fluctuations de la bourse de New-York. Pendant que la voiture écrase les piétons et les cyclistes qui sont en tort (parce que c’est ça aussi de ne pas se soumettre au code des assurances de la route) le conducteur peut relire le contrat sur son smartphone.
      Couché sur la banquette arrière, son cerveau.

  • Systèmes de notation au travail, les employés sous pression François Rüchti - 30 Avril 2018 - RTS
    http://www.rts.ch/info/suisse/9525991-systemes-de-notation-au-travail-les-employes-sous-pression-.html

    Après les restaurants, les systèmes de notation s’étendent désormais aux personnes physiques dans des entreprises comme Swisscom, Apple ou Uber. Salaires, promotion et licenciements peuvent dépendre des notes de l’employé.

    La mode vient des Etats-Unis et Apple est pionnier dans le domaine. Après chaque visite dans un magasin, le client est amené à évaluer le vendeur de 1 à 10. En cas de mauvaise moyenne, l’employé « est remis à l’ordre », selon les propos d’un ex-cadre d’Apple Suisse dans l’émission Mise au Point.

    Chez Swisscom, le système de notation est similaire. Ce procédé est cependant décrié par les collaborateurs. « Vous avez toujours la hantise d’arriver et qu’on vous dise ’ta note a baissé’. Il y a des personnes qui ont des angoisses, ce n’est pas possible. Vous ne faites pas du travail correct quand vous avez des pressions à longueur de journée », témoigne une employée sous couvert d’anonymat.

    >> Lire aussi  : Dans des magasins Swisscom, des écoutes de conversations enfreindraient la loi http://www.rts.ch/info/suisse/9526317-dans-des-magasins-swisscom-des-ecoutes-de-conversations-enfreindraient-l

    Course aux bonnes notes
    Officiellement, l’objectif est d’améliorer le service. « Le but est de mesurer la satisfaction de nos clients. Il n’est pas question de mettre une pression exagérée », explique Christian Neuhaus, porte-parole de Swisscom.

    Reste que cette course aux bonnes notes est telle que trois collaborateurs ont récemment triché dans le Jura. Par diverses astuces, ils ont augmenté artificiellement les chiffres des ventes et le résultat des notations. Pincés par la direction, ils ont été licenciés.

    C’est qu’une portion de la rémunération des employés de Swisscom est basée sur le système de notation. « Une partie du bonus de l’ensemble des collaborateurs est payé en fonction de la satisfaction des clients au niveau national, pas directement de la note », précise Christian Neuhaus.

    Être noté ou disparaître
    Le pouvoir des notes ne touche pas que les salariés. Le système a aussi un impact sur les indépendants et les professions libérales par le biais de sites web qui proposent de noter les avocats ou les médecins.
    Pédiatre dans la région genevoise, la doctoresse Cécile Kerdudo Veau figure sur différents sites de notation. « Je n’ai jamais donné aucun accord, je ne me suis jamais inscrite sur Google. Cela s’est fait au fil du temps », déplore-t-elle.

    Ce qui fâche la doctoresse, c’est l’impossibilité de dialoguer avec ces patients anonymes aux notes et commentaires assassins. Cécile Kerdudo Veau a bien demandé à Google de supprimer ses notes, sans succès. L’unique solution proposée par la firme américaine ? Effacer son existence numérique et disparaître d’internet. 

    « Contrôle social »
    Parmi les professions les plus à risque figurent encore les chauffeurs de taxi indépendants, notamment ceux travaillant pour Uber et Drivel. Ces sociétés se débarrassent quasi automatiquement des conducteurs mal évalués. Chez Uber, le système d’évaluation est même poussé à son extrême. Le chauffeur comme le client se notent mutuellement.

    « C’est une forme de mise en discipline de son comportement, où on ne peut pas être spontané. Les comportements atypiques seront sanctionnées. (...) Il y a un vrai contrôle social », analyse Olivier Glassey, sociologue spécialisé dans les nouvelles technologies à l’Université de Lausanne.

    Et la tendance s’accentue en Suisse. Après Swisscom, Apple et Uber, plusieurs grandes entreprises étudient actuellement la mise en place d’un système de notation.

    >> Voir le reportage de Mise au Point : http://www.rts.ch/info/suisse/9525991-systemes-de-notation-au-travail-les-employes-sous-pression-.html

    #Suisse (mais aussi en France, bien sur) #surveillance #espionnage #fichage #flicage des #salariés par les #managers et la #hiérarchie #guerre_aux_pauvres #contrôle #gestapo managériale #stasi #vie_privée #contrôle-social

  • How #blockchain Will Change the Sharing Economy
    https://hackernoon.com/how-blockchain-will-change-the-sharing-economy-1ecbc77abb0?source=rss---

    By Samantha Radocchia, Co-Founder at Chronicled (2015-present). Originally published on Quora.Think of how the sharing economy has exploded in the past decade. If you’ve taken an Uber to the airport or rented an Airbnb, you’ve been a part of it.We’re even at a point where renting out personal items is a viable business model. For example, Omni Storage stores items you’re not using — just like a normal storage company — but they also rent your items out to people. Skis, guitar, winter jacket. It’s all available for rent (with the owner’s permission) via an app.We all hold onto certain possessions, because we plan to use them eventually. Or so we tell ourselves. Why not make some money off of our stuff instead of letting it go unused?That question is at the heart of the sharing economy, and we’re (...)

    #quora-partnership #economics #blockchain-economy #sharing-economy

  • What is Uber up to in Africa?
    https://africasacountry.com/2018/04/what-is-uber-up-to-in-africa

    Uber’s usual tricks — to provoke price wars in an attempt to increase their share of markets, evade taxes, and undermine workers’ rights — are alive and well in Africa.

    Technophiles and liberals across the African continent are embracing the ride sharing application Uber. Their services are especially popular with the young urban middle classes. In most African cities, public transport is limited, unpredictable and often dangerous, especially after dark. Uber is also cheaper than meter-taxis. Uber’s mobile application makes taxi rides efficient and easy, and women feel safer since rides are registered and passengers rate their drivers.

    Since 2013, Uber has registered drivers in 15 cities in nine African countries: from Cape to Cairo; from Nairobi to Accra. In October last year, Uber said they had nearly two million active users on the continent. The plans are to expand. While media continues to talk about how Uber creates jobs in African cities suffering from enormous unemployment, the company prefers to couch what they do as partnership: They have registered 29,000 “driver-partners.” However, through my research and work with trade unions in Ghana and Nigeria, and a review of Uber’s practices in the rest of Africa, I found that there are many, including Uber’s own “driver partners,” who have mixed feelings about the company.

    Established taxi drivers rage and mobilize resistance to the company across the continent. While Uber claims to create jobs and opportunities, taxi drivers accuse the company of undermining their already-precarious jobs and their abilities to earn a living wage while having to cope with Uber’s price wars, tax evasion and undermining of labor rights.

    Take Ghana, for example. Uber defines its own prices, but regular taxis in Accra are bound by prices negotiated every six months between the Ghanaian Federation for Private Road Transport (GPRTU) and the government. The negotiated prices are supposed to take into account inflation, but currently negotiations are delayed as fuel prices continues rising. The week before I met Issah Khaleepha, Secretary General of the GRPRTU in February, the union held strikes against fuel price increases. Uber’s ability to set its own price gives it a distinct advantage in this environment.

    Like in most African countries the taxi industry in Ghana is part of the informal economy. Informality, however, is not straightforward. Accra’s taxis are licensed, registered commercial cars, marked by yellow license plates and painted in the same colors. Drivers pay taxes. Uber cars are registered as private vehicles, marked by white license plates, which gives them access to areas that are closed to commercial vehicles, such as certain hotels.

    Uber is informalizing through the backdoor and pushing a race to the bottom, says Yaaw Baah, the Secretary General of the Ghana Trade Union Congress (Ghana TUC). The Ghana TUC, the Ghanaian Employers Association (GEA) and the government all support the International Labor Organization’s formalization agenda, which says that the formalization of informal economy will ensure workers’ rights and taxes owed to governments.

    The fault lines in Uber’s business model have been exposed in other parts of the continent as well. In Lagos, Uber cut prices by 40% in 2017, prompting drivers to go on strike. Drivers have to give up 25 percent of their income to Uber, and most drivers have to pay rent to the car owners. Many drivers left Uber for the Estonian competitor, Taxify, which takes 15 percent of revenues. In February 2017, an informal union of Nairobi drivers forced Uber to raise their fares from 200 Kenyan Shillings to 300 (from 33 to 39 cents) per kilometer; yet still a far cry from a foundation for a living wage.

    In Kenya, South Africa and Nigeria, the fragmented and self-regulated taxi industry is associated with violence, conflicts and criminal networks. There are reports of frequent violence and threats to Uber drivers. So-called taxi wars in South Africa, which began in the 1980s, have turned into “Uber wars.” In South African, xenophobia adds fuel to the fire sine many Uber drivers are immigrants from Zimbabwe or other African countries. In Johannesburg two Uber cars were burned. Uber drivers have been attacked and killed in Johannesburg and Nairobi.

    The fragmentation and informality of the transport industry makes workers vulnerable and difficult to organize. However, examples of successes in transportation labor organizing in the past in some African countries, show that it is necessary in order to confront the challenges of the transportation sectors on the continent.

    A decade ago, CESTRAR, the Rwandan trade union confederation, organized Kigali motorcycle taxis (motos) in cooperatives that are platforms from where to organize during price negotiations, and to enable tax payment systems.

    For Uganda’s informal transport workers, unionization has had a dramatic impact. In 2006, the Amalgamated Transport and General Workers Union in Uganda, ATGWU, counted only 2000 members. By incorporating informal taxi and motorcycle taxes’ (boda-boda) associations, ATGWU now has over 80,000 members. For the informal drivers, union membership has ensured freedom of assembly and given them negotiating power. The airport taxis bargained for a collective agreement that standardized branding for the taxis, gave them an office and sales counter in the arrivals hall, a properly organized parking and rest area, uniforms and identity cards. A coordinated strike brought Kampala to a standstill and forced political support from President Yoweri Museveni against police harassment and political interference.

    South Africa is currently the only country in Africa with a lawsuit against Uber. There, 4,000 Uber drivers joined the South African Transport and Allied Workers Union, SATAWU, who supported them in a court case to claim status as employees with rights and protection against unfair termination. They won the first round, but lost the appeal in January 2018. The judge stressed that the case was lost on a technicality. The drivers have since jumped from SATAWU to National Union of Public Service and Allied Workers (Nupsaw), and they will probably go to court again.

    Taxi operators don’t need to join Uber or to abandon labor rights in order get the efficiency and safety advantages of the technology. In some countries, local companies have developed technology adapted to local conditions. In Kigali in 2015, SafeMotos launched an application described as a mix of Uber and a traffic safety application. In Kenya, Maramoja believes their application provides better security than Uber. Through linking to social media like Facebook, Twitter and Google+, you can see who of your contacts have used and recommend drivers. In Ethiopia, which doesn’t allow Uber, companies have developed technology for slow or no internet, and for people without smartphones.

    Still, even though the transport sector in Ethiopia has been “walled off” from foreign competition, and Uber has been kept out of the local market, it is done so in the name of national economic sovereignty rather than protection of workers’ rights. By contrast, the South African Scoop-A-Cab is developed to ensure “that traditional metered taxi owners are not left out in the cold and basically get with the times.” Essentially, customers get the technological benefits, taxis companies continues to be registered, drivers pay taxes and can be protected by labor rights. It is such a mix of benefits that may point in the direction of a more positive transportation future on the continent.

    #Uber #Disruption #Afrika

    • Taxi operators don’t need to join Uber or to abandon labor rights in order get the efficiency and safety advantages of the technology. In some countries, local companies have developed technology adapted to local conditions. In Kigali in 2015, SafeMotos launched an application described as a mix of Uber and a traffic safety application. In Kenya, Maramoja believes their application provides better security than Uber. Through linking to social media like Facebook, Twitter and Google+, you can see who of your contacts have used and recommend drivers. In Ethiopia, which doesn’t allow Uber, companies have developed technology for slow or no internet, and for people without smartphones.

      Still, even though the transport sector in Ethiopia has been “walled off” from foreign competition, and Uber has been kept out of the local market, it is done so in the name of national economic sovereignty rather than protection of workers’ rights. By contrast, the South African Scoop-A-Cab is developed to ensure “that traditional metered taxi owners are not left out in the cold and basically get with the times.” Essentially, customers get the technological benefits, taxis companies continues to be registered, drivers pay taxes and can be protected by labor rights.

      @taxi

    • L’introduction de l’article décrit clairement la stratégie d’Uber. Elle est vieille comme le capitalisme.

      Uber’s usual tricks — to provoke price wars in an attempt to increase their share of markets, evade taxes, and undermine workers’ rights — are alive and well in Africa.

      #Uber s’en prend au plus faibles car ils savent qu’ils leur opposeront la moindre résistance. En #Chine le géant US a perdu contre un plus puissant, n’ayant rien à apporter aux utilisateurs ils n’ont pas trouve de partenaire comme Apple, Microsoft, Daimler, Volkswagen et d’autres grandes marques. Uber a fini en mettant les clés sous la porte en venadant son affaire pour une somme modeste à un concurrent chinois. En Europe on comprend que l’influences des géants US crée des problèmes, alors on essaye de prendre au sérieux le mythe de la cocurrence qui encourage les affaires en limitant l’influence de la plateforme. Ailleurs les choses ne se passent pas mieux pour eux sauf dans des sociétés sans structures protégeant les marchés et les citoyens. Voilà la véritable raison de l#engagement d’Uber en Afrique : Ils sont aussi corrompu que les pires compradors de l’époque coloniale.

      #post-colonialisme

  • #blockchain May Be the Answer to Making Self Driving Cars Safer
    https://hackernoon.com/blockchain-may-be-the-answer-to-making-self-driving-cars-safer-7d8e18067

    Image source: BBC NewsA few days ago, Uber, the world largest taxi sharing company, got into trouble after one of its self-driving cars hit and killed a pedestrian in Tempe, Arizona.According to the Guardian, footage released by the police shows that the SUV’s LIDAR and radar system failed to detect the victim even though she was visible in front of the car before the collision.The Uber accident underlines what have been on the minds of most of us; just how safe are self-driving cars compared to their human-operated counterparts?While there isn’t enough data to determine whether autonomous cars are safer than human-driven ones, the premise behind the technology seems to suggest so. The self-driving technology involves highly sensitive cameras and sensors equipped with the latest (...)

    #self-driving-cars #autonomous-cars #autonomous-vehicles #self-driving-blockchain

  • Uber State Interference: How Transportation Network Companies Buy, Bully, and Bamboozle Their Way To Deregulation | The Partnership For Working Families
    http://www.forworkingfamilies.org/resources/publications/uber-state-interference-how-transportation-network-companies-buy

    Author:
    The Partnership for Working Families
    Over the past four years, transportation network companies (TNCs), primarily Uber and Lyft, have convinced legislators in the vast majority of states to overrule and preempt local regulations and strip drivers of rights. The speed and sweeping effectiveness of the industry’s use of this strategy, known as state interference (or preemption), is unprecedented. 

     

    http://www.forworkingfamilies.org/sites/pwf/files/publications/Uber%20State%20Interference%20Jan%202018.pdf
    http://www.forworkingfamilies.org/sites/pwf/files/publications/Uber%20State%20Interference%20Jan%202018%20Exec.%20Summary.pdf
    Campaign: State Interference
    http://www.forworkingfamilies.org/campaigns/state-interference

    #Uber #USA

  • Reputation inflation explains why Uber’s five-star driver ratings system became useless — Quartz
    https://qz.com/1244155/good-luck-leaving-your-uber-driver-less-than-five-stars


    Das Bewertungssystem von Uber und anderen Internet-Plattformen funktioniert nicht. Technisch betrachtet ist alles O.K. aber weder "gute"noch „schlechte“ oder „durchschnittliche“ Bewertung haben die nahe liegende Bedeutung. Auf der einen Seite vergeben Kunden systematisch ein Maximum an Punkten, weil sie auch miesen Fahrern nichts Böses antun wollen, auf der anderen Seit wird manipuliert und betrogen, was das Zeug hält, wie die bekannte Geschichte mit dem „besten Restaurant Londons“ zeigt, das in Wirklichkeit nicht existierte.

    In der Praxis ist es wie in einer Schule, wo nur Einsen vergeben werden und jede Zwei zum Nichtbestehen führt.

    Dieser Artikel und die unten verlinkte Studie zeigen genauer, was dahinter steckt und was man für Schlüssen aus den Beobachtungen ziehen kann.

    Have you ever given an Uber driver five stars who didn’t deserve it? If you’ve ever taken any ride-hailing service, the answer is probably yes.

    Uber asks riders to give their drivers a rating of one to five stars at the end of each trip. But very few people make use of this full scale. That’s because it’s common knowledge among Uber’s users that drivers need to maintain a certain minimum rating to work, and that leaving anything less than five stars could jeopardize their status.

    Drivers are so concerned about their ratings that one Lyft driver in California last year posted a translation of the five-star system in his car, to educate less savvy passengers. Next to four stars he wrote: “This driver sucks, fire him slowly; it does not mean ‘average’ or above ‘average.’” In a tacit acknowledgement of this, Uber said in July that it would make riders add an explanation when they awarded a driver less than five stars.

    How did Uber’s ratings become more inflated than grades at Harvard? That’s the topic of a new paper, “Reputation Inflation,” from NYU’s John Horton and Apostolos Filippas, and Collage.com CEO Joseph Golden. The paper argues that online platforms, especially peer-to-peer ones like Uber and Airbnb, are highly susceptible to ratings inflation because, well, it’s uncomfortable for one person to leave another a bad review.

    The somewhat more technical way to say this is that there’s a “cost” to leaving negative feedback. That cost can take different forms: It might be that the reviewer fears retaliation, or that he feels guilty doing something that might harm the underperforming worker. If this “cost” increases over time—i.e., the fear or guilt associated with leaving a bad review increases—then the platform is likely to experience ratings inflation.

    The paper focuses on an unnamed gig economy platform where people (“employers”) can hire other people (“workers”) to do specific tasks. After a job is completed, employers can leave two different kinds of feedback: “public” feedback that the worker sees, and “private” reviews and ratings that aren’t shown to the worker or other people on the platform. Over the history of the platform, 82% of people have chosen to leave reviews, including a numerical rating on a scale from one to five stars.

    In the early days of the platform in 2007, the average worker score was pretty, well, average at 3.74 stars. Over time that changed. The average score rose by 0.53 stars over the course 2007. By May 2016, it had climbed to 4.85 stars.

    People were more candid in private. The platform introduced its option to leave private feedback in April 2013. From June 2014 to May 2016, the period studied in the paper, about 15% of employers left “unambiguously bad private feedback” but only 4% gave a public rating of three stars or less. They were also more candid in written comments, possibly because written comments are less directly harmful to the worker than a low numerical score.

    Then, in March 2015, the platform decided to release private ratings in batches to workers. In other words, a private review wasn’t totally private anymore, and leaving a negative one could cause harm. The result was immediate: Bad feedback became scarce and imperfect scores were reserved for truly poor experiences. If the trend continued, the authors estimated that the average private rating would be the highest possible score in seven years.

    This, again, is similar to what has happened on Uber and other ride-hailing platforms. In the early days, riders left a range of reviews, but it didn’t take long for the default to become five stars, with anything else reserved for extreme cases of hostile conduct or reckless driving. “I took a ride in a car as grimy and musty-smelling as a typical yellow cab,” Jeff Bercovici recalled for Forbes in August 2014. “I only gave the driver three out of five stars. Just kidding. I gave him five stars, of course. What do you think I am, a psychopath?”

    Services are different from products. Someone who feels guilty leaving a bad review for another person probably won’t share those concerns about posting a negative review of a toaster. It’s the personal element that gives us pause. A separate, forthcoming study on online reputations found that the number of users leaving negative feedback on a travel review website decreased after hotels started replying to the critiques, despite no change in hotel quality.

    The problem is particularly acute on “sharing” economy platforms because companies like Uber, which regard their workers as independent contractors instead of employees, use ratings riders provide to manage their workforces at arm’s length. These ratings systems ask customers to make tough decisions about whether workers are fit to be on the platform, and live with the guilt if they’re not. Put another way: On-demand platforms are offloading their guilt onto you. Five stars for all!

    Hintergrund und Details
    http://john-joseph-horton.com/papers/longrun.pdf

    #Uber #ranking #gig_economy #Arbeit

  • Uber agrees to settle bias case involving women, minorities for $10 million
    https://www.sfchronicle.com/business/article/Uber-to-settle-discrimination-case-for-10-million-12785437.php

    Uber has agreed to pay $10 million to settle a class-action lawsuit brought on behalf of 420 female and minority software engineers who alleged discrimination and a hostile work environment. The proposed settlement comes as the tech industry wrestles with a notable lack of diversity. Silicon Valley companies in the past couple of years have begun documenting the racial breakdown of their workforces, which has shown a fairly dismal picture with minorities and women underrepresented. Uber, (...)

    #Uber #travail #procès #discrimination

  • Trump Administration Fights Effort to Unionize Uber Drivers
    https://theintercept.com/2018/03/26/uber-drivers-union-seattle

    In 2015, Seattle became the first and only city to allow its ride-share drivers to unionize. But now the union may be broken up before it holds a single bargaining session, thanks to a legal alliance between Uber and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce — joined recently by the Trump administration. The 9th Circuit of Appeals is currently deliberating Chamber of Commerce v. City of Seattle, a suit brought on Uber’s behalf by the pro-business organization. Uber and the chamber hope to label the (...)

    #Uber #travail #FTC #lobbying #harcèlement #travailleurs

  • They were sold a fantasy of middle-class life. Now Ola and Uber drivers face a brutal reality
    https://qz.com/1230993/the-reality-of-driving-for-ola-and-uber-in-india-debt-slashed-pay-multiple-jobs

    Tanveer Pasha, a 33-year-old taxi driver in Bengaluru, is in a dilemma. As president of the OTU (Ola, Taxiforsure, and Uber) Drivers and Owners Association, he’s keen on joining his colleagues in Mumbai and New Delhi in their March 19 strike against mobile app-based cab aggregators over dwindling earnings. Yet, he just can’t afford to. “Every Rs100 is important to drivers today and we need to earn it by driving,” Pasha told Quartz. “Today, we are not able to meet our needs from Ola and Uber.” (...)

    #Uber #travail #Ola #Taxiforsure

  • Egypt court orders suspension of Uber, Careem services in victory for taxis: sources

    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-egypt-uber/egypt-court-orders-suspension-of-uber-careem-services-in-victory-for-taxis-

    Forty two Egyptian taxi drivers filed a lawsuit a year ago against U.S.-based Uber and its Dubai-based competitor Careem, arguing they were illegally using private cars as taxis. They also claimed that the two firms were registered as a call center and an internet company, respectively.

    Khaled al-Gammal, a lawyer acting for the taxi drivers, said

    the court suspended the two companies’ licenses, banned their apps and suspended the use of private cars by the two ride-hailing services.

    Tuesday’s decision was effective immediately, meaning the companies must suspend services pending a final ruling, although the companies have 60 days to appeal, the judicial sources said.

    Uber said it would appeal and it was not immediately clear when a final ruling would be issued.

    Careem said it had not yet received any official request to stop operations in Egypt, and continued to operate as normal.

    Uber intends to appeal any court decision to suspend ride sharing licenses in Egypt, an Uber spokesperson said.

    “We will do all we can to ensure millions of Egyptians can continue to enjoy the benefits of on-demand transportation,” the Uber official said.

    “We are fully committed to working with the entire sector – including taxis – to improve mobility in Egypt together. We will appeal this decision, and continue to be available in Egypt in the meantime.”

    Uber said Egypt is its largest market in the Middle East, with 157,000 drivers in 2017 signed up and 4 million users having used the service since its launch there in 2014.

    The San Francisco-based company said last year it was committed to Egypt despite challenges presented by sweeping economic reforms and record inflation. In October Uber announced a $20 million investment in its new support center in Cairo.

    It has had to make deals with local car dealerships to provide its drivers with affordable vehicles and adjust its ride prices to ensure its workers were not hit too hard by inflation.

    Egypt is one of Uber’s fastest-growing markets, its general manager in the country, Abdellatif Waked, has said, according to state news agency MENA.

    Related Video
    Egypt’s investment ministry said last year that a draft law regulating web-based transport services would provide a legal framework for companies like Uber, but did not say when that bill was likely to be passed.

    Uber has faced regulatory and legal setbacks around the world amid opposition from traditional taxi services. It has been forced to quit several countries, such as Denmark and Hungary.

    Last year, London deemed Uber unfit to run a taxi service and stripped it of its license to operate. Uber is appealing against the decision.

  • Uber halts self-driving car tests after death - BBC News
    http://www.bbc.com/news/business-43459156

    Uber said it is suspending self-driving car tests in all North American cities after a fatal accident.

    A 49-year-old woman was hit by a car and killed as she crossed the street in Tempe, Arizona.

    While self-driving cars have been involved in multiple accidents, it is thought to be the first time an autonomous car has been involved in a fatal collision.

    Uber chief Dara Khosrowshahi said the death was “incredibly sad news”.

    #voiture_auto_pilotée ça commence pas bien
    “We’re thinking of the victim’s family as we work with local law enforcement to understand what happened,” he said in a tweet.

  • How Banks Could Survive the Tech Revolution and Act as Consumer Champions to Save You a Fortune
    https://hackernoon.com/how-banks-could-survive-the-tech-revolution-and-act-as-consumer-champion

    What has yours ever done for you?When did you ever come out of a bank and say wow, the customer service was exceptional or felt like you have received tremendous value for #money? If you’re anything like me the answer is never.Someone’s going to do to Banks what Uber done to the Taxi IndustryTaxi’s were never sexy — Uber changed the game. The power isn’t in existing technologies, it’s in re-imagining entrenched institutions while making use of the days available technology. Overthrowing something which has operated in the same way for so long is never easy. People think banks need to operate in the same way as they always have because they can’t imagine anything different. The purpose of this pot is to challenge that perception while challenging you to expect more from the people who look after (...)

    #entrepreneurship #startup #finance #blockchain

  • Uber accused of silencing women who claim sexual assault by drivers
    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/mar/15/uber-class-action-lawsuit-sexual-assault-rape-arbitration

    Court records reveal company says women must settle through arbitration, a move critics say stops the public from learning of rapes Uber is trying to force women who say they were sexually assaulted by drivers to resolve their claims behind closed doors rather than in the courts, a move that critics say silences victims and shields the company from public scrutiny. Court records in a California class-action lawsuit revealed that the ride-sharing firm has argued that female passengers who (...)

    #Uber #procès #harcèlement

  • Fare Choices Survey of Ride-Hailing Passengers in Metro Boston – MAPC
    https://www.mapc.org/farechoices


    Annual household income of surveyed riders who substituted transit use, walking, or cycling.

    Wie de privaten Fahrtenvermittlern dem öffentlichen Nahverkehr schaden
    cf. https://seenthis.net/messages/673637

    EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
    The ride-hailing industry, led by Uber and Lyft, has seen explosive growth in recent years. As more and more travelers choose these on-demand mobility services, they have the potential to transform regional travel patterns. These transformations may become even more profound if widespread adoption of autonomous vehicles makes on-demand mobility even less expensive and more efficient. Either way, it is likely that the use of ride-hailing today is but the tip of the iceberg, with an even greater expansion of these services to come.

    This transformation in personal mobility is likely to bring a host of changes: some positive, others less so. For public agencies, planning for that transformation is made difficult by the paucity of information about ride-hailing trips. Conventional transportation surveys have been slow to measure the change in behavior; and transportation network companies see their data as a valuable commodity and are unwilling to provide it to transportation planners.

    Public sector access to these data is essential. Only with a better understanding of this new mode of transportation can analysts develop better forecasts of travel behavior and infrastructure needs, measure the region’s progress toward a more sustainable future, and establish more efficient operations and management practices for existing roadways.

    In an effort to begin filling those gaps in our understanding of the ride-hailing industry and its users, MAPC surveyed nearly 1,000 ride-hailing passengers in late 2017 and asked about their demographics, the nature of their trip, and why they chose ride-hailing over other modes of transportation.

    Photo via Lyft
    The results confirmed many common assumptions about ride-hailing users; they also provided striking new insight into the ways that the services are changing travel behavior and affecting our existing transportation system. Not surprisingly, the survey found that most ride-hailing users are under the age of 35, that most of them use the service on a weekly basis, and that most don’t own a car. Less predictably, we found that reported rider incomes are similar to the region overall, and a substantial number of trips are made by people from households earning less than $38,000 per year. (And no, they’re not all students; most of those lower-income riders are in the workforce.)

    The survey results also provide some hard data about the types of trips made via ride-hailing. Most trips start or end at home, but nearly one-third (31%) are from one non-home location to another. Ride-hailing usage is distributed throughout the day; the evening hours from 7:00 P.M. to midnight see the greatest frequency of trips, but about 40% of weekday trips take place during the morning or afternoon commute periods. People also like to travel by themselves: only one-fifth of customers opt for a truly shared ride (e.g., UberPOOL), and the majority of travel is for a single passenger. Riders are willing to pay a substantial premium for the convenience and predictability of ride-hailing. Nearly two thirds of trips cost more than $10, and one in five costs more than $20.

    While the services are justifiably popular, their growing use may result in negative outcomes for traffic congestion, transit use, and active transportation. When asked how they would have made their current trip if ride-hailing hadn’t been an option, 12% said they would have walked or biked, and over two-fifths (42%) of respondents said they would have otherwise taken transit. Some of this “transit substitution” takes place during rush hours. Indeed, we estimate that 12% of all ride-hailing trips are substituting for a transit trip during the morning or afternoon commute periods; an additional 3% of riders during these times would have otherwise walked or biked. Overall, 15% of ride-hailing trips are adding cars to the region’s roadways during the morning or afternoon rush hours.

    Notably, we found that this “transit substitution” is more frequent among riders with a weekly or monthly transit pass. Those who ride transit more often are more likely to drop it for ride hailing, even while doing so at a huge cost differential, and even when they have already paid for the transit.

    Riders without a transit pass opting for ride-hailing, on the other hand, means less fare revenue for the MBTA. After accounting for transit pass availability and substitution options, we estimate that the average ride-hailing trip represents 35 cents of lost fare revenue for the MBTA. This lost revenue exceeds the amount of the legislatively mandated 20 cent surcharge on each ride. That surcharge itself represents a remarkably small fraction of trip costs. When compared to reported fares, the surcharge amounts to less than 2% of the cost for most rides. Because it is a fixed fee, long and expensive rides that may have the greatest impact on traffic congestion and air quality pay 1% or less.

    Photo by Anty Diluvian
    These findings begin to provide a better understanding of this evolving mobility option that will undoubtedly continue to change the way people travel around the region. Our results raise concerns about how users are becoming accustomed to on-demand mobility, and what that means for the future of the region’s transportation system. Even if future ride-hailing vehicles were fully electric and autonomous, the region’s roadways could not accommodate unchecked growth in single-occupant vehicle travel. It is essential to ensure that the region has a reliable and effective transit system that—from the rider’s perspective—is competitive with and complementary to on-demand mobility services. For transit to thrive, it must change, perhaps by incorporating the types of on-demand response and real-time information that riders value.

    Meanwhile, there is a great need to understand the effects of ride hailing and to ensure a balance of benefits and costs resulting from these commercial services. Ride hailing is already having substantial impacts on congestion and transit revenue, the costs of which are not recouped by the small surcharge. A higher fee would provide more resources to mitigate the negative effects of ride hailing without substantially affecting rider costs. Even more preferable would be a fee structure proportional to the impacts of each ride on the transportation system. To the extent possible, such fees should also be structured to incentivize shared trips, thereby reducing overall impacts on the transportation system while also accommodating ride-hailing preferences. Of course, effective policy requires better data about when, where, and why ride-hailing trips are taking place. Only by understanding the current adoption of ride-hailing and on-demand mobility can we plan for its successful and sustainable future.

    #Uber #ÖPNV

  • CEEPR Site
    http://ceepr.mit.edu/publications/working-papers/681

    We perform a detailed analysis of #Uber and Lyft ride-hailing driver economics by pairing results from a survey of over 1100 drivers with detailed vehicle cost information. Results show that per hour worked, median profit from driving is $3.37/hour before taxes, and 74% of drivers earn less than the minimum wage in their state. 30% of drivers are actually losing money once vehicle expenses are included. On a per-mile basis, median gross driver revenue is $0.59/mile but vehicle operating expenses reduce real driver profit to a median of $0.29/mile. For tax purposes the $0.54/mile standard mileage deduction in 2016 means that nearly half of drivers can declare a loss on their taxes. If drivers are fully able to capitalize on these losses for tax purposes, 73.5% of an estimated U.S. market $4.8B in annual ride-hailing driver profit is untaxed.

    #gig_economy #pauvreté

  • Douglas Schifter blamed politicians for ruining life | Daily Mail Online
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5359349/NYC-cab-driver-shot-railing-politicians.html

    Livery cab driver who shot himself dead in front of New York’s City Hall blamed politicians and ride-sharing services like Uber for ’financially ruining’ his life

    A livery driver shot himself dead in his car in front of New York’s City Hall on Monday morning after venting on Facebook about the transportation industry
    Douglas Schifter, 61, wrote a lengthy post about two hours before his death blaming ride-sharing services as well as politicians for financially ruining his life
    Schifter, a driver since the ’80s, also ranted about issues in the transportation industry in columns he wrote for the for-hire publication Black Car News
    Neil Weiss, owner of Black Car News, said his friend had been struggling to pay his bills recently and had to move in with extended family in Pennsylvania

    By Minyvonne Burke For Dailymail.com and Associated Press

    Published: 18:47 GMT, 6 February 2018 | Updated: 00:06 GMT, 7 February 2018

    A livery cab driver in New York vented on Facebook that politicians and ride-sharing services like Uber had ’financially ruined’ his life hours before he shot himself dead on Monday in front of New York’s City Hall.

    Douglas Schifter drove up to the east gate of City Hall around 7.10am and shot himself in the head while sitting in his car, the New York Police Department said. The 61-year-old driver was pronounced dead at the scene. No one else was injured.

    Around 5:30am, less than two hours before his suicide, Schifter posted an ominous message on Facebook blaming Uber as well as Mayor Bill de Blasio, Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Michael Bloomberg for destroying his livelihood.

    ’I have been financially ruined because three politicians destroyed my industry and livelihood and Corporate NY stole my services at rates far below fair levels,’ Schifter wrote in a lengthy post.
    Douglas Schifter, a livery can driver in New York, killed himself on Monday morning
    +4

    Douglas Schifter, a livery can driver in New York, killed himself on Monday morning
    Police said Schifter drove to the east gate of New York’s City Hall and shot himself in the head

    Police said Schifter drove to the east gate of New York’s City Hall and shot himself in the head
    About two hours before his death, Schifter vented on Facebook that ride-sharing services like Uber as well as politicians had ’financially ruined’ his life
    +4

    About two hours before his death, Schifter vented on Facebook that ride-sharing services like Uber as well as politicians had ’financially ruined’ his life

    ’I worked 100-120 consecutive hours almost every week for the past fourteen years. When the industry started in 1981, I averaged 40-50 hours. I cannot survive any longer with working 120 hours! I am not a Slave and I refuse to be one.’

    Schifter accused companies of not paying their drivers ’fair rates’ which in turn caused drivers desperate to make ends meet to ’squeeze rates to below operating costs and force professionals like me out of the business’.

    ’They count their money and we are driven down into the streets we drive becoming homeless and hungry. I will not be a slave working for chump change. I would rather be dead,’ he fumed.

    Later in the post, Schifter slammed Uber as a company ’that is a known liar, cheat and thief’.

    Schifter expressed similar frustrations in columns he wrote for Black Car News, a publication for the for-hire vehicle industry.

    While venting about congestion pricing, Schifter wrote: ’The government is continuing its strong drive to enslave us with low wages and extreme fines. It’s a nightmare.’

    Neil Weiss, a friend of Schifter’s and the owner of Black Car News, said Schifter had been struggling to pay bills and moved in with extended family in Pennsylvania. He said his pal had texted him about 90 minutes before he killed himself that he was ’making it count’.

    ’I worked 100-120 consecutive hours almost every week for the past fourteen years. I am not a Slave and I refuse to be one’, the 61-year-old driver wrote on his Facebook page

    According to taxi and limousine records, Schifter had driver livery cabs, black cars and limousines since the early 1980s

    Weiss told the New York Post that he assumed Schifter’s cryptic message was in reference to the Facebook post his friend shared earlier on Monday.

    ’Obviously, that’s not what he meant,’ he said.

    ’He was a really sweet guy. His life had just gotten destroyed by the way the transportation industry had been going in New York City. There’s been some very significant adjustments in the past few years.’

    According to Weiss, Schifter complained for years that the change in their industry - which saw an increase in drivers and the introduction of ride-sharing services like Lyft and Uber - was ’hurting a lot of people’.

    ’There’s been a lot of changes in the transportation industry in New York City over the past bunch of years and not for the better,’ Weiss said. ’I was hoping he was getting things together.’

    Taxi and limousine records show that Schifter had driven livery cabs, black cars and limousines since the early 1980s.

    #USA #travail #disruption #suicide #Uber #taxi

  • La société de transports Uber accuse une perte colossale en 2017 RTS - ats/jgal - 14 Février 2018
    http://www.rts.ch/info/economie/9333953-la-societe-de-transports-uber-accuse-une-perte-colossale-en-2017.html

    Uber a accusé une perte colossale de 4,5 milliards de dollars en 2017, selon des chiffres diffusés mardi. Un léger mieux a toutefois été enregistré au dernier trimestre, avec une nette hausse du chiffre d’affaires.

    Selon les données publiées par le site The Information et confirmées à l’AFP par Uber, ce dernier fait état d’une perte nette de 1,1 milliard au quatrième trimestre, réduite par rapport au troisième trimestre (1,46 milliard). Le groupe n’a pas fourni de comparaison par rapport à 2016.

    L’Américain a réalisé un chiffre d’affaires « net » de 2,22 milliards de dollars sur les trois derniers mois de 2017, soit une hausse d’environ 60% par rapport à la même période de 2016 (1,38 milliard).
    http://www.rts.ch/2017/08/24/09/34/8698027.image?w=900&h=506

    Rémunérations et ristournes déduites
    Uber, qui souhaite entrer en bourse en 2019, fait aussi état d’un chiffre d’affaires « brut » de 11 milliards de dollars (contre 6,9 milliards au dernier trimestre 2016) sur le trimestre, duquel il déduit notamment 8 milliards de dollars de rémunérations aux chauffeurs et de ristournes aux clients pour arriver à son chiffre d’affaires « net ».

    Sur l’année, la perte s’élève à 4,5 milliards, très nettement creusée par rapport aux 2,8 milliards de dollars de perte accusés un an plus tôt.

    #uber #taxi #travail #économie #guerre_aux_pauvres #conditions_de_travail #droit #capitalisme #précarité #économie_de_l_avenir #transport #voiture #rentabilité

  • How Automation Could Worsen Racial Inequality
    https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2018/01/black-workers-and-the-driverless-bus/550535

    Self-driving buses would knock out crucial jobs in black communities across the country. All across the world, small projects demonstrating driverless buses and shuttles are cropping up : Las Vegas, Minnesota, Austin, Bavaria, Henan Province in China, Victoria in Australia. City governments are studying their implementation, too, from Toronto to Orlando to Ohio. And last week, the Federal Transit Administration of the Department of Transportation issued a “request for comments” on the topic (...)

    #Lyft #Uber #voiture #discrimination #travail

  • Could Self-Driving Trucks Be Good for Truckers ?
    https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2018/02/uber-says-its-self-driving-trucks-will-be-good-for-truckers/551879/?mc_cid=b6f10b9311&mc_eid=8f72f58e93

    That’s what a new study from Uber’s self-driving-truck team says, and a variety of trucking experts think they might be right. The outlook for trucking jobs has been grim of late. Self-driving trucks, several reports and basic logic have suggested, are going to wipe out truckers. Trucking is going to be the next great automation bloodbath. But a counter-narrative is emerging : No, skeptics in the industry, government, academia are saying, trucking jobs will not be endangered by autonomous (...)

    #Uber #voiture #travail #discrimination

  • Uber and Waymo Settle Trade Secrets Suit Over Driverless Cars - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/09/technology/uber-waymo-lawsuit-driverless.html

    Entre riches et puissants, il y a toujours un moyen de s’arranger. C’est un des problèmes des brevets : ils organisent la concurrence/coopération entre gros portefeuilles de brevets, mais marginalisent les acteurs de moindre importance. De même, les salaires astronomiques renforcent la concentration des compétences chez quelques géants aux appétits voraces.

    SAN FRANCISCO — Waymo and Uber settled their legal fight on Friday, nearly a year after Waymo first accused the ride-hailing company of plotting to steal important self-driving car technology.

    After four days of arguments and testimony in Federal District Court here, Uber agreed to provide Waymo, the self-driving car unit under Google’s parent company, Alphabet, with 0.34 percent of its stock. According to Waymo, the settlement’s terms value Uber at $72 billion, meaning the Alphabet unit’s stake is worth about $245 million.

    The settlement closes a legal fight that riveted Silicon Valley. It pitted the most successful company from the dot-com era against this generation’s biggest start-up in a fight over autonomous vehicles — a potentially trillion-dollar industry that is expected to transform transportation.

    The trial also offered a peek into how Silicon Valley really works: the rise of promising start-ups that challenge incumbents; the inner workings of rich, but often chaotic, technology companies; the complicated rivalries among billionaire tech entrepreneurs; and the costly competition for engineering talent.

    #Uber #Google #Waymo #Accord #Procès

  • Home | Taxiapp UK
    https://www.taxiapp.uk.com

    FEATURES

    As well as being safe, reliable and accessible, London taxis are great value for money too. All licensed taxis have a fully regulated taximeter, updated and controlled by Transport for London.
    ACCESSIBILITY

    Vehicle specifications require all licensed taxis to be wheelchair accessible, with integrated ramps and colour-coded handgrips to provide support required for ease of access as well as a hearing loop. All assistance dogs are welcome.
    FARES AND PRICES

    The metered fare, as set and regulated by Transport for London, combined with your driver’s Knowledge ensures that you are driven the most direct route to your destination.
    THE KNOWLEDGE

    For your safety and peace of mind, all Licensed Taxi Drivers have undergone extensive training and passed the world famous Knowledge of London examination. All Licensed Taxi Drivers are DBS checked.

    TAXIAPP UK Forum @taxiapp_london
    https://twitter.com/taxiapp_london?lang=en

    A work focussed app owned and run by Black Cab drivers on a non profit making basis. Drivers: http://onelink.to/thmr62 Passengers: http://onelink.to/thmr62

    Taxiapp UK on the App Store
    https://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/taxiapp-uk/id1147254955?mt=8

    Amazing taxi booking app
    Taxiapp ltd

    Taxiapp: London’s black cab co-op alternative to Uber - Co-operative News
    https://www.thenews.coop/122467/sector/community/taxiapp-londons-black-cab-co-op-alternative-uber

    ’TFL’s decision not to renew Uber London’s operating license suggests the current trajectory of app-based taxi services needs to change’

    TFL announced today (22 September) it will not be renewing Uber’s licence with the ride-hailing app ‘not fit and proper’ to operate in London. The decision has raised questions over the future of the city’s transport options, however Taxiapp London offers a new, sustainable model run solely by a group of taxi drivers.

    Sean Paul Day, Taxiapp London founding member, said: “Today’s decision proves that our laws have to be respected and that London’s private hire industry should not dominated by multinational companies. This a crucial time for tech starts-up like Taxiapp, who continue to prove more self-sufficient, having been able to survey the horizon and grow in a more sustainable way that puts both drivers and passengers at the forefront.”
    The Taxiapp London team

    Taxiapp is completely owned by London black cab drivers. It allows passengers to book and pay like they would through Uber, but rather than a fixed price that can be subject to huge surges, the fare is always decided by the meter. Unlike Uber, it is built on transparency and promotes fair economic growth and will be relaunched in October with a new feature to protect the ritual of hailing a cab.

    Ed Mayo, Secretary general of Co-operatives UK, said: “TFL’s decision not to renew Uber London’s operating license suggests the current trajectory of app-based taxi services needs to change. Platform businesses are not going anywhere but they are going to evolve. We need a new wave of successful platforms with the same great user experience, but built on trust, transparency and economic fairness. It looks like TFL agrees. Ethical alternatives like driver-led Taxiapp are springing up – through the co-operation of the drivers themselves. A better platform economy is already on its way.”

    Taxiapp London utilises a fully licenced and officially metered service endorsed by Transport for London, which means no surge pricing for passengers. Every one of the licenced drivers has passed the world famous ‘Knowledge of London’ test, which has proven to result in shorter journey times and a more efficient service.

    The app is non-for-profit owned directly by the drivers themselves developed with the aim of offering an honest, trustworthy service that puts customer and driver welfare at the forefront. By utilising tried and tested technology this small group from one of London’s oldest surviving professions are leading the way in bringing transparency to the London transport. Taxiapp is currently in the process of applying for support through the Hive, the business support programme powered by The Co-operative Bank and delivered by Co-operatives UK.

    #Taxi #London #Uber #platform_cooperativism

  • The Gender Earnings Gap in the Gig Economy : Evidence from over a Million Rideshare Drivers
    https://web.stanford.edu/%7Ediamondr/UberPayGap.pdf

    The growth of the “gig” economy generates worker flexibility that, some have speculated, will favor women. We explore one facet of the gig economy by examining labor supply choices and earnings among more than a million rideshare drivers on Uber in the U.S. Perhaps most surprisingly, we find that there is a roughly 7% gender earnings gap amongst drivers. The uniqueness of our data—knowing exactly the production and compensation functions—permits us to completely unpack the underlying (...)

    #Uber #algorithme #travail #discrimination

  • Les conductrices Uber gagnent 1,24 dollar par heure de moins que les conducteurs : pourquoi ?
    https://www.numerama.com/tech/327491-les-conductrices-uber-gagnent-124-dollars-par-heure-de-moins-que-le

    Une étude réalisée par des universitaires et des économistes de l’entreprise Uber montre qu’une différence de salaire entre les femmes et les hommes existe, mais qu’elle n’est pas forcément due à l’application ou aux usagers. Les hommes qui conduisent pour Uber gagnent environ 7 % de plus par heure que les femmes, selon une étude des revenus de plus d’1,8 million de chauffeurs Uber. L’étude, publiée le 6 février, a été réalisée par des chercheurs des universités de Chicago et de Stanford, en collaboration (...)

    #Uber #algorithme #discrimination #travail