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Uber Demonstrations Snarl Traffic In London, Madrid, Berlin

Graculus (3653645) writes with news that, as threatened, cab drivers in several European cities mounted a protest against Uber today. From the article: "Uber Technologies Inc., the car-sharing service that's rankling cabbies across the U.S., is fighting its biggest protest yet from European drivers who say the smartphone application threatens their livelihoods. Traffic snarled in parts of Madrid and Paris today, with a total of more than 30,000 taxi and limo drivers from London to Berlin blocking tourist centers and shopping districts. They are asking regulators to apply tougher rules on San Francisco-based Uber, whose software allows customers to order a ride from drivers who don't need licenses that can cost 200,000 euros ($270,000) apiece." The Guardian covered the London protest, which ended peacefully 3 p.m..

507 comments

  1. Competition Sucks by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Competition sucks. Gotta keep that privileged access to the market.

    --
    I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    1. Re:Competition Sucks by Trepidity · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If Uber were really offering legitimate competition, I would be more sympathetic. But they're partly undercutting existing taxis through ridiculous things like using drivers who lack commercial vehicle insurance, which is rather irresponsible.

    2. Re:Competition Sucks by js3 · · Score: 1

      How so? Requiring one party to pay 200,000 euros to operate a taxi while not enforcing that on another party is not competition. That privileged access is a requirement from the government itself.

      --
      did you forget to take your meds?
    3. Re:Competition Sucks by nctritech · · Score: 2

      Yes, and the solution is to eliminate that requirement.

    4. Re:Competition Sucks by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It appears that Londoners were adopting Uber rapidly when all the taxis went away to protest.

      the reality is that the cat is out of the bag. If Uber stop existing, it won't alter the fact that ad-hoc ride calling schemes will continue to exist legal or not, because the technology exists and is ubiquitous.

      Lawmakers would be wise to work with the real worlds, rather than against it. But they don't generally do that, so it'll be messier than it needs to be.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    5. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > drivers who lack commercial vehicle insurance

      What exactly is the difference between me giving a couple of friends a ride somewhere, and me giving a couple of strangers a ride somewhere? The line between commercial insurance and personal insurance is a scam invented to do one thing - make insurance companies rich.

    6. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and that hasn't happened yet. So in the meantime taxi drivers are getting angry. This is leading to demonstrations.

    7. Re:Competition Sucks by Trepidity · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If people start losing their driver's licenses when they're caught doing commercial driving without being properly insured, I would guess fewer of them will take the risk.

    8. Re:Competition Sucks by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

      >That privileged access is a requirement from the government itself.

      And they are lobbying their governments to keep that privileged access. Being undercut by a cheaper competitor is certainly competition.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    9. Re:Competition Sucks by grumpy_technologist · · Score: 4, Informative

      all ridesharing transportation partners carry best-in-class commercial insurance coverage in the event of an accident.

      Also, their coverage is considerably higher (in dollar amount) than commercial taxis in major cities. Uber provides this for their drivers. The drivers do not need to purchase this.

      source: http://blog.uber.com/uberXride...

    10. Re:Competition Sucks by Trepidity · · Score: 2

      It's generally riskier for the insurance company. People who offer transportation services for a fee have heightened liability to passengers (which is passed on to the insurance) than people who are driving friends/family. They also typically have a higher risk of incurring a payout in a given year.

      Vehicle insurance is a fairly competitive market, and most of the rates are set pretty straightforwardly by actuaries.

    11. Re:Competition Sucks by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Competition sucks. Gotta keep that privileged access to the market.

      I am hardly wholly sympathetic to the taxis; but there is one important aspect that is often elided in the hagiographic "Hail Uber, destroyer of corrupt taxi monopolist cartels!" pieces: In regulated markets, taxi operators are subject to a variety of rules, some of them costly (insurance, metering accuracy consumer protection stuff, getting the much-coveted and supply limited taxi medallion in the first place), that Uber is just too hip and 'disruptive' to bother with.

      If you wish to adopt the 'bring on the competition and let the cards fall as they may" view, it is an imperative that the existing taxi providers be released from the assorted regulatory burdens that Uber just ignores. Failure to do so is, in effect, a substantial subsidy to Uber under the guise of 'competition'.

      If you take the position that taxi regulations exist for good historical reasons, founded on what happened before there were such regulations, it is similarly imperative to keep them from being flouted by assorted twee distinctions-without-difference "Oh, this isn't a taxi, it's an independent entrepreneur(who just happens to be hardwired directly into our business' software systems; but never you mind that, having 'employees' might expose us to obligations) offering social ridesharing!".

      Regardless of whether you prefer the status quo, or would prefer to set the status quo on fire, anyone who does abide by taxi-related regulation and has to compete with people who don't has a very legitimate grievance. Whether that ought to be resolved by eliminating that regulation or extending it is a different matter; but either position still leaves the existing taxi guys getting the short end of the regulatory situation as it is now.

    12. Re:Competition Sucks by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Uber supplies insurance protecting the passenger from loss and liability up to $1 million.

    13. Re:Competition Sucks by praxis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >That privileged access is a requirement from the government itself.

      And they are lobbying their governments to keep that privileged access. Being undercut by a cheaper competitor is certainly competition.

      Party A plays by the rules and therefor has higher costs. Party B does not play by the rules and has lower costs. Party A is angry at the unfairness of this situation. I agree that the rules are dumb, but unfairness rankles me more. Either Uber buys taxi licenses for its drivers or we abolish taxi licenses. Until then, the should both play by the rules.

    14. Re:Competition Sucks by bigpat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, if these are people who's job it is to drive people around in order to make money then that is a limousine or taxi service and it should be regulated the same way.... but $270,000 license fees sound more like glorified bribes to prevent competition than something close to a legitimate license fee.

      If the taxi drivers were protesting the absurd license fees, then I would be more sympathetic.

      On the other hand if part of the uber service is simply a better way of matching people for sharing the costs of carpooling and ride sharing, then that is a service that is sorely needed and really isn't a taxi or limousine service.

    15. Re:Competition Sucks by NotDrWho · · Score: 2

      I'd be less pissed about the competition from Uber and MUCH MORE pissed about the ridiculous cost of those licenses. I mean, $270,000, REALLY???

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    16. Re:Competition Sucks by swillden · · Score: 1, Interesting

      If Uber were really offering legitimate competition, I would be more sympathetic. But they're partly undercutting existing taxis through ridiculous things like using drivers who lack commercial vehicle insurance, which is rather irresponsible.

      Is it?

      The fact that commercial vehicles must have said insurance by law doesn't mean it's actually necessary even for them. In many cases, those sorts of legal requirements are imposed not because they're actually necessary per-se, but because they establish obstacles to entry of service providers into the market, and aren't obviously arbitrary. They are arbitrary, just not obviously arbitrary.

      In a market where information is highly asymmetric, establishing arbitrary obstacles to entry is actually a useful thing to do, because the mere act of bothering to clear the hurdles demonstrates a high probability of good faith on the part of the company trying to enter. Individuals or organizations trying to brand themselves as cabs, for example, in order to more easily rob unsuspecting patrons will wish to be able to establish themselves quickly and then disappear quickly.

      The Internet, particularly the mobile Internet, however, breaks down information asymmetries. Uber uses different mechanisms that have much lower friction to establish trust in its drivers, eliminating the need for arbitrary obstacles. Do Uber's mechanisms work? I don't know. They appear to, and time will tell whether or not something more is required to make the service safe and effective.

      This then means we have to revisit the basis for requiring commercial vehicle insurance. Since it's no longer required as an arbitrary (but not obviously arbitrary) obstacle, is it actually required? What problem does it solve that's not solved some other way?

      FYI, I suspect I know what the problem is, and I think it probably is a real problem. My point is that all of the assumptions about what is necessary for ordinary commercial operations do have to be re-evaluated because in the new context they may not make sense, even if this one does. We shouldn't just blindly apply the old rules, but should instead see what problems arise and apply the rules that make sense to resolve the problems.

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    17. Re:Competition Sucks by cowwoc2001 · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a problem for insurance companies, not the government. What is the difference between the two kinds of insurances except for the price? If you drive someone "occasionally" should your insurance really cost as much as the full commercial insurance does?

    18. Re:Competition Sucks by swillden · · Score: 0

      Update: As others have pointed out, Uber already addresses the question of liability coverage by providing the coverage itself... so the potential problem arising from drivers not having coverage is already handled via another mechanism, making the law irrelevant (not inapplicable in a legal sense, just irrelevant in the sense that it's not actually accomplishing anything).

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    19. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      But they're partly undercutting existing taxis through ridiculous things like using drivers who lack commercial vehicle insurance, which is rather irresponsible.

      That's not true for the countries these demonstrations are in. For example in Britain all Uber drivers and cars are required to be licensed as "Private Hire" drivers and cars (2 separate licenses.) In order to get the private hire car license, you must present the certificate of commercial insurance to the local council.

      Uber's competition in Britain at least is completely legitimate. They are obeying the law. And the department that issues licenses for London have come out and said as much.

    20. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 2

      Lawmakers in Britain don't have to do anything, as Uber is already able and does comply with all licensing requirements.

    21. Re:Competition Sucks by meta-monkey · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Regulation is fine. Insist that Uber drivers have commercial insurance. An insurance company will offer "uber insurance" for a few extra euros and they'll make some money and the public will be safer. Uber could even partner with an insurer to make that happen more quickly and smoothly. But there's no reason you need a 200k euro license to drive people around.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    22. Re:Competition Sucks by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How the heck does this make the public safer? It makes it more likely to get money from your opponent's insurance if he kills you on the street, but that's about it.

      Insurances never make anything more secure. They make the loss more bearable. At best.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    23. Re:Competition Sucks by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      You mean impose punishments that are way, way out of proportion compared to the "crime"? Like insane fine blown out of proportion have stopped filesharing? That way?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    24. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 2

      but $270,000 license fees sound more like glorified bribes to prevent competition than something close to a legitimate license fee.

      I don't know where the article got that number from. In London, a taxi driver license incurs fees of a few hundred dollars. And a Taxi vehicle license is less than a hundred. Perhaps they are quoting the cost to be a licensed taxi operator (the company that runs many taxis).

      (NB: Uniquely, London does require potential Taxi drivers to know all the streets, important locations and routes for central London. A monumental feat of memorisation that generally takes 2-5 years of hard work to complete, buzzing around the city on a scooter. Called "Doing The Knowledge". So it's certainly hard to become a taxi driver there. It's far more of a bar then the costs.)

    25. Re:Competition Sucks by Russ1642 · · Score: 1

      $1 million coverage is not enough.

    26. Re:Competition Sucks by kaizendojo · · Score: 2

      And do what, pay back those taxi drivers that already bought their hack license? Sure, that'll happen. Cause the government loves to give back money.

    27. Re:Competition Sucks by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Uber handles the insurance issue by providing it themselves. They insure their drivers for $1 million.

      It's perfectly reasonable to extend regulations for vehicle safety/inspections, posted notices, etc to Uber drivers, but the taxi drivers aren't protesting Uber because of public safety, they're protesting because Uber drivers aren't bothering to play the medallion game. That I have no sympathy for.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    28. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I won't be surprised if the people who are pro-Uber are the very same ones who are anti-H1B or anything else that gives "evil" corporations a way of undercutting domestic labor.

      We are always for something that makes things cheaper for us regardless of the underlying issues and against anything that may take away from our income. We're hypocrites since the justifications used to lower our costs are the very same justifications used against us to lower our wage.

    29. Re:Competition Sucks by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

      Some of the other problems are nonsense, too. Background checks are social: if your cabbie is a rapist, you can report that; if you disappear in transit, there are records of where your phone was and what cab drive you had. Service is, likewise rated rather than a company promise; and they use GPS to track distance. Most of these mechanisms are satisfactory to the average user, and out of the control of the driver and passenger alike.

      Round One had a bunch of people talking about some highly-arrogant sense of self-importance black cab drivers derive from a specialized certification. They have full knowledge of the area's history, sports, current events, and the best route through the city in their head, so they can chat you up while they drive and can find the shortest path. A lot of folks weighed heavily on this idea that you get the shortest path and thus the best deal; but, if Uber is cheaper, a less-optimal path may come out at a lower dollar cost. Likewise, GPS navigation with real-time traffic largely handles this; and many people don't want an enforced premium just so they can ride with a cab driver who knows everything about everything.

    30. Re:Competition Sucks by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      How is me driving with a stranger more likely to result in an accident than me driving with a friend? If you think my friend is more predictable, you don't know my friends.

      Also, the "higher risk" is mostly due to commercial drivers driving ALL the time while "normal" drivers will only do so when they need the car, i.e. the higher risk is due to them being on the road far more often and far longer. The cab driver would not go to the passenger's destination if it wasn't for the passenger wanting to go there. That's not the case with commercial car sharing because they only get to tag along. I would not go to their destination if I wasn't going there anyway.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    31. Re:Competition Sucks by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      That's why the Black Cab Mafia is extorting protection from the government. Wouldn't it be a shame if your nice London streets got all clogged and your nice London shop owners went out of business?

    32. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      The fact that commercial vehicles must have said insurance by law doesn't mean it's actually necessary even for them.

      Of course it's necessary. If the driver only has non-commercial insurance, then the insurance company won't pay out when they discover that the car was being used for commercial work.

      And why is it acceptable that Insurance companies have a two tier system? Because commercial vehicles are used far more than private vehicles, and the carrying of passengers makes for greater liabilities.

      (I'll leave aside the question of whether Uber themselves provide insurance, as the issue is whether they are insured, not who purchases the insurance.)

    33. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      A decent part of being "hip and 'disruptive'" is skirting archaic regulations and laws. Your presumption that those regulations exist for good historical reasons is reasonable, but that certainly does not mean that they are still valid or necessary. Being "disruptive" shakes up the status quo so they can be reevaluated, which would take way too long to evolve naturally. If the hacks wanted a "fair" playing field they would embrace these changes, rather than fight them.

    34. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right that they're undercutting cabbies and limos, but they're so heavily regulated (beyond what it required to be safe) that very few can break into the business. Lawmakers should work with Uber to require a basic level of competence, equipment and insurance. Cab/Limo companies who recognize the coming change (which will come one way or another, it's just the way things happen) will likely adapt well and remain on top, whereas others will peeter out making room for more innovation. In fact, we'll probably find these companies partnering with Uber (and companies like it). This change will be painful for some, profitable for others, but likely awesome for the consumer.

    35. Re:Competition Sucks by Penguinisto · · Score: 2

      If insurance is your only beef, then like sibling said - most insurance companies can offer an "Uber" rider for a couple extra pounds/euros each month, and that's that.

      Otherwise, I do have a question: why the demand for "commercial insurance" in the first place? If you and your rider get in a wreck, you're the driver, and would theoretically face the exact same liabilities as a commercial driver would - prolly less, since the plaintiff would be more likely to jack up the monetary demands against a commercial taxi. Also, most auto insurance setups actually do cover the passengers in your vehicle should they get injured, so, well - what's the beef?

      If the rider gets injured, sure he can sue you - just like a hitchhiker could, or a friend riding along, or anyone really. If you're signing on to drive someone around, that's the risk you accept. One caveat, though: if the rider signed a waiver online that lists the risks, and requires him to acknowledge and agree to them before ordering a ride, he very well wouldn't have much of a case unless the driver were drunk or high or etc.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    36. Re:Competition Sucks by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      But the standard varies between $50,000 and $150,000 depending on municipal requirements.

    37. Re:Competition Sucks by swillden · · Score: 1

      Yes, that's the issue I suspected. However, Uber has already addressed it.

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    38. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $1 million coverage is not enough.

      Insurance limits are somewhat like dumping blood into the ocean. HIgher limits just attract more and bigger sharks^H^H^H^H^H^Hlawyers.

    39. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why Not?

    40. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > drivers who lack commercial vehicle insurance

      What exactly is the difference between me giving a couple of friends a ride somewhere, and me giving a couple of strangers a ride somewhere? The line between commercial insurance and personal insurance is a scam invented to do one thing - make insurance companies rich.

      Um taking a set sum of money for it, and doing it every day, several times a day? Insurance is a rather wonderful product, any company can come along and charge less (after meeting a handful of requirements) than the other guys, if they can really mitigate the risk for a lower cost. So while they do make tons of money, it's not because of a scam or cabal or onerous regulations, it's because consumers are not choosing their providers more carefully.

    41. Re:Competition Sucks by swillden · · Score: 3, Informative

      If people start losing their driver's licenses when they're caught doing commercial driving without being properly insured, I would guess fewer of them will take the risk.

      Uber provides a $1M liability policy, so they are properly insured.

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    42. Re:Competition Sucks by dj245 · · Score: 1

      Competition sucks. Gotta keep that privileged access to the market.

      There are many legitimate reasons to limit the number of cars available for hire. Taxis drive around the city core looking for passengers, or park in the city waiting for a call. Increased competition would make this worse. In some cities, traffic is already a nightmare. I don't live in New York or any particularly dense city, but I have driven in many. Taking even a small number of cars off the road is often very desirable.

      You can limit the number of delivery trucks, personal vehicles, and public/private busses on the roads only so much using financial incentives (high tolls and parking fees). At a certain point you need to use other methods to limit the number of cars, and limiting the number of taxis (and taxi-like services) is something that is easily implemented through taxi medallions. It is also reasonable because in most cities who don't license "enough" taxis, there are plenty of transportation alternatives.

      --
      Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
    43. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      That's not the case with commercial car sharing because they only get to tag along. I would not go to their destination if I wasn't going there anyway.

      I don't know how Uber operates where you are. But in Britain they are not for casual profitable car shares. They have recruited people who drive hire cars for a living. They need to be licensed, but driver and car, in addition to the commercial insurance. So it wouldn't be worth it for the occasional casual to do it.

    44. Re:Competition Sucks by spasm · · Score: 1

      It would be competition if taxi drivers were allowed to ignore the regulations that govern their activities too. All regulation has compliance costs; uber is 'competetive' largely because it dodges the compliance costs borne by existing services.

      Now what would be really interesting is to see what happens when some city decides 'sure, uber can operate here, but we're dropping all the regulations we've built up over the years which currently apply to cabs too'.

    45. Re: Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *crash* $1M in medical costs to cover a multivehicle crash. Lol.

      Might as well provide unlimited band aides and call it good.

    46. Re:Competition Sucks by SydShamino · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You are assuming that Uber drivers only go places they would go anyway. Numerous previous stories indicate otherwise. So drivers are on roads they may not know with a stranger they may not be comfortable with next to them, who may be talking on the phone or doing other things typically done in a cab. Plus the odds of having a passenger are higher, and you are less likely to know their past medical issues, and they are more likely to take you for all they can get than a friend would be.

      I'm not an actuary, but those all seem like things that would result in higher premiums to me. And that excludes flat-out higher liabilities for commercial drivers.

      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
    47. Re:Competition Sucks by jeffmeden · · Score: 1

      That's not the case with commercial car sharing because they only get to tag along. I would not go to their destination if I wasn't going there anyway.

      That's an assertion so dubious it's hard to know where to start. I suppose that it would be fair for lawmakers to mandate a lie detector feature in your car when you are driving for Uber, to ascertain if you are really driving of your own direct will, or acting based on the guy in the back seat who just agreed to pay you by the minute.

    48. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      What country/city charges that much? The article doesn't say. Certainly not London.

      I suspect they've stupidly quoted the cost for an operators license, i.e. what a company which runs many taxis would pay.

    49. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Worse yet, every user of Uber as part of their terms of service agrees to hold Uber harmless for any damages or injuries sustained while being a passenger of Uber. The insurance of 99% of their drivers will be null and void in the event of an accident as personal vehicle insurance policies to not cover the use of those vehicles to transport passengers for hire. Uber claims to have a million dollar liability policy to cover injuries when a claim to the driver's insurance company is inevitably denied. What they don't tell you, you'd first have to invalidate the in court liability waiver you agreed to by using the service. In the end, if you are injured, don't expect to get paid a dime by Uber or the driver's insurance company.

    50. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      stty erase ^H

    51. Re:Competition Sucks by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 0

      Fortunately, or unfortunately you don't need a 'commercial' insurance. A normal one is just fine, Except for trucks I doubt that there something like an 'commercial insurance' even exists.
      You need a special commercial license to transport people, that is cheap, just an extended drivers license, and a so called 'concession' a permit issued by the city to actually work in that city as cap driver.

      --
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    52. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Uber are playing by all rules in London. The London licensing body has said as much.

      The London Black Cab drivers are angry because the technology allows Private Hire cars such as Uber to compete much better. It's a protectionist complaint.

    53. Re:Competition Sucks by mythosaz · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If people start losing their driver's licenses when they're caught doing commercial driving without being properly insured, I would guess fewer of them will take the risk.

      You mean impose punishments that are way, way out of proportion compared to the "crime"?

      Why is losing your license when specifically operating your motor vehicle in express violation of your license somehow "way, way out of proportion"?

      It seems exactly in proportion.

    54. Re:Competition Sucks by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Uber most certainly is, but the drivers driving 'for' Uber most certainly are not.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    55. Re:Competition Sucks by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      The number is wrong.
      It is that simple. There are two licenses. The actual license to transport persons in a car, which is a simple extension to your driving license and hence rather cheap. (Perhaps 1k - 2k Euros)
      THEN there is a permit issued by the city to be allowed to actually run a cab in that city. This again is rather cheap, just a few k Euros.
      HOWEVER the cities consider themselves full with cabs, so they don't issue such permits anymore.
      The only way to get one is to transfer an existing one from one cab owner to another. THAT is what costs a few 10k to up to a few 100k bugs as the previous owner is not giving it up cheaper.
      So the 'corruption' the cab drivers are complaining about is 'inside' of 'their own system'!

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    56. Re:Competition Sucks by pr0fessor · · Score: 1

      Not safer but most personal auto insurance plans won't cover you in the event you are in an accident while driving commercially. My state doesn't require a special license if the vehicle holds less than 16 passengers, but you do need auto insurance that will cover commercial, a tax ID, and you have to pay taxes.

    57. Re:Competition Sucks by mythosaz · · Score: 1

      Insurance is quoted for people based on their driving behaviors.

      While it all obviously depends on averages (and everyone on the internet is a special snowflake with an anecdote to counter anything), the average personal driver drives fewer miles, with fewer occupants, to known locations, on repeated paths, generally close to where they live and work. Commercial drivers, not so much.

      That's the beef.

    58. Re:Competition Sucks by mythosaz · · Score: 1

      If people start losing their driver's licenses when they're caught doing commercial driving without being properly insured, I would guess fewer of them will take the risk.

      Uber provides a $1M liability policy, so they are properly insured.

      Oh, you're serious? Let me laugh even harder.
      www.youtube.com/watch?v=FopyRHHlt3M

    59. Re:Competition Sucks by Sarten-X · · Score: 1

      It makes it more likely to get money from your opponent's insurance if he kills [or otherwise injures] you on the street...

      ...which certainly improves financial security.

      There's also the detail that to get commercial insurance, the insurer can impose further restrictions to improve their own assumed risk. A price break for having regular maintenance, good record, or practicing safe driving habits, for example, can all reduce specific risks to the driver, passengers, and bystanders.

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
    60. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really dude, I hope you get cancer. Having insurance coverage to pay for treatment literally can mean the difference between life or death, a full recovery or a partial one.

    61. Re:Competition Sucks by Sarten-X · · Score: 1

      And if you're getting paid for something, you'll probably do it more often, simply tempting probability more that you'll have a serious problem.

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
    62. Re:Competition Sucks by Shimbo · · Score: 1

      As far as London taxis go there are two sorts of taxis: the familiar black cabs, and minicabs. Black cabs have the privilege of being able to be hailed by a passing passenger, whereas mini cabs need to be booked through their firm.

      The main public interest in this distinction is that booking minicabs means that a third party will have a record of the passenger and driver, if the police need to come looking to see what has happened to the passenger. It takes years of training to know London well enough to get a taxi licence, so it's something of a barrier to someone with criminal intent.

      The thing about Uber, is that it provides a very efficient way of linking up minicabs with passengers, whilst maintaining the record that the law requires. However, the taxi drivers have got used to the inconvenience of having to book the competition as their competitive advantage.

    63. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Nerds: "Competition! Distruptive markets! Adapt or die!"

      IT Corporations: "Cool, we'd like to bring in loads of Indian programmers because you lot are too expensive"
      Nerds: "NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!"

      Government: "Well we can always teach computer science to every kid. That way there'll be a huge supply of future programmers which will bring down the cost of IT systems and software"
      Nerds: "NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!"

      Film companies: "You know we use the free market to set a price for our goods that people are willing to pay and we offer plenty of alternatives such as streaming, so we think the government should crack down on illegal operations that steal our shit"
      Nerds: "NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!"

    64. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      In what way? Do you have any evidence?

    65. Re:Competition Sucks by dj245 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Also, their coverage is considerably higher (in dollar amount) than commercial taxis in major cities. Uber provides this for their drivers.

      $1m isn't enough. Most commercial taxis are run by companies which have other assets besides 1 taxi which might be involved in a major accident. They usually have more taxis, the taxi license (which can be sold for a high price, about $1m each in NYC), an dispatcher office somewhere, etc. They also have other sources of income- if one taxi is destroyed and the driver disabled, the others still generate income. If their insurance only partly covers an accident, they can pay it off using the income from the other taxis, sell some of their (considerable) assets, get a business loan, etc.

      Compare this with Joe Blow with his 1 car, 1 employee (himself), and no other significant assets. Let's assume a very serious accident involving multiple cars with multiple injuries. At best, Joe escaped the accident unharmed, and only has to buy a new car. More likely, Joe himself was probably injured in the serious accident, can't work for several days/weeks/months, and has his own medical bills to pay. His "normal" vehicle insurance won't chip in for Joe's injuries since it doesn't cover commercial use of the vehicle. The passengers' medical bills exceed $1m, which can easily happen in a very serious accident. What recourse does the passenger have? They have huge bills to pay and need to recover damages from someone, but Joe Blow might very well be destitute. Uber keeps their drivers at arms length so recovering from them is unlikely. The passenger gets screwed and has little legal recourse against a destitute Joe. Getting a $20 check from Joe every month for the next 50 years isn't going to pay their huge medical bills.

      Even though the commercial taxi company has less insurance, the passenger is better protected against out of pocket accident costs.

      --
      Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
    66. Re:Competition Sucks by dj245 · · Score: 2

      Yes, and the solution is to eliminate that requirement.

      That requirement exists for reasons besides money.

      --
      Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
    67. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Fortunately, or unfortunately you don't need a 'commercial' insurance. A normal one is just fine, Except for trucks I doubt that there something like an 'commercial insurance' even exists.

      For Britain, you are most certainly wrong. I suspect for most of the rest of the world you are wrong too.

    68. Re:Competition Sucks by jopsen · · Score: 1

      If Uber were really offering legitimate competition, I would be more sympathetic. But they're partly undercutting existing taxis through ridiculous things like using drivers who lack commercial vehicle insurance, which is rather irresponsible.

      True, and calling the drivers self-employed, which is also a lie that moves more liability to the drivers and in the US frees uber of having to pay benefits etc...
      That said, I'm pretty sure uber requires drivers to be insured, also uber does have insurances that covers the passenger, etc. google it for details.

      Another, big cost saving that uber does is letting people use their private vehicles, which does make sense from a cost cutting perspective. And enables drivers to offer better service. For example by keeping their car clean.

      Note, cost cutting is not the only reason uber is nice. Ordering and paying through an app is really nice too. So is the rating system, which holds drivers accountable.

    69. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alternatively the drivers could stop paying the huge fees and become Uber (or alternative service) drivers instead, if that really is the issue. Drivers aren't asking for the fees to be decreased, they want the fees to remain as a barrier to entry and to stop any competition.

    70. Re:Competition Sucks by bsolar · · Score: 1

      The problem is that privileged access to the market is exactly how the system was meant to work.

      A taxi driver in most of the countries involved is required to buy a license which costs as high as $250'000, which the taxi driver is usually able to recoup only after 15 years of activity. No sane person would invest that much money (often requiring to get a loan) without some guarantee that they will be able to recoup and profit from it, which is what the regulated access to the market was supposed to do.

      Now most municipalities would gladly let Uber or other private companies operate, but taxi drivers paid them a lot of money to get the licenses supposed to protect them from the competition which Uber is doing... many of them have not recouped their investment yet and if Uber is allowed to operate most likely never will.

    71. Re:Competition Sucks by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      As a principle, government should not pick winners and losers. This is a free country and whoever wants to try to start any business has a right to.

      Regulations are fine for safety and similar things, but the government has no business limiting entry to a select few.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    72. Re:Competition Sucks by alexander_686 · · Score: 1

      You are assuming that insurance companies can't discriminate. They can, where allowed by law.

      Require that the insurer has a commercial or limo license (In America at least the requirements are higher). Charge higher fees for those with lots of driving infractions. Charge lower fees for those who attend certifications and take classes. etc..

      The point being is that the regulations should say if you can meet the requirements you are good to go. Currently most cities issue a fixed number of licenses.

      The problem is that the insider who hold the licenses (usually gained with great effort) want to keep the outsiders out. The safety issue is mostly a smoke screen.

    73. Re:Competition Sucks by N1AK · · Score: 2

      >That privileged access is a requirement from the government itself.

      And they are lobbying their governments to keep that privileged access. Being undercut by a cheaper competitor is certainly competition.

      Party A plays by the rules and therefor has higher costs. Party B does not play by the rules and has lower costs. Party A is angry at the unfairness of this situation. I agree that the rules are dumb, but unfairness rankles me more. Either Uber buys taxi licenses for its drivers or we abolish taxi licenses. Until then, the should both play by the rules.

      Uber is playing by the rules (at least in the UK). In London you need a license to drive a cab and that license comes with various rules but also various benefits. Cabs are allowed to stop for passengers who flag them in the street, which Uber drivers and other services aren't. In the past this was fine with cabbies because it wasn't easy to get a non-cab quickly. Now with services like Uber it is often cheaper to do so. In London cab licenses are for 12 months. If Cab drivers think that they would be better off driving for Uber then they are free to stop paying for a license and to do so.

    74. Re:Competition Sucks by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      If Uber were really offering legitimate competition, I would be more sympathetic. But they're partly undercutting existing taxis through ridiculous things like using drivers who lack commercial vehicle insurance, which is rather irresponsible.

      Only undercutting in some instances. In others they are charging more and winning out because of better service.

    75. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is not true. In all the cities I have read about so far (have not read the details in Europe), they actually carry more insurance than the local taxi's.

    76. Re:Competition Sucks by kilodelta · · Score: 1

      But here's the thing about the industry in general. The outrageous taxi scheme goes away one autonomous vehicles are predominant. Just whistle up a car and it takes you where you need to go. No more human to have to pay, no more of that.

    77. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      I am hardly wholly sympathetic to the taxis; but there is one important aspect that is often elided in the hagiographic "Hail Uber, destroyer of corrupt taxi monopolist cartels!" pieces: In regulated markets, taxi operators are subject to a variety of rules, some of them costly (insurance, metering accuracy consumer protection stuff, getting the much-coveted and supply limited taxi medallion in the first place), that Uber is just too hip and 'disruptive' to bother with.

      This story is about European cities, where Uber operates perfectly legally, following the regulations.

      It sounds like there are some US cities where Uber are not offering the right people bribes. And so protectionism is working against them. But that's off topic for this story.

    78. Re: Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read your Uber terms of service contract. They have you waive your rights away. Step one in getting to their 1M coverage is to fight the contract. Good luck with that.
       

    79. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      There are many legitimate reasons to limit the number of cars available for hire

      Granted, but such a crude tool like limiting the number of medallions is one of the old methods that made sense long ago, but doesn't any more. Without services like Uber it would be nearly impossible to implement a more modern, more efficient and more useful solution.

    80. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      No, not really. The article doesn't specify where it's talking about, but I doubt there's anywhere in the world that charges that for a taxi license.

      It's possible that the article is referring to the cost of an operators license. The company that runs a fleet of taxis. Or it may be that it's referring to the one off price that one Taxi driver will charge another to take over his license, where the issue of licenses is limited.

    81. Re:Competition Sucks by king+neckbeard · · Score: 2

      Because it's just driving a passenger around for money. I've done that with friends and acquaintances quite a few times, albeit in a less formal setting.

      --
      This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    82. Re:Competition Sucks by alexander_686 · · Score: 1

      First, because commercial activity is a proxy for costs. Taxis drive more so they tend to get into accidents more. When they get into accidents there tends to be more people in the car. In theory this could be refined, for example charging insurance by the mile and not by the year.

      Second, I think, payouts for commercial passengers tend to be higher. If I am at fault in an accident my passengers (i.e. wife) can claim medical but probably not lost wages. Lost wages probably would be covered for a passage however. I am sure this is highly dependent on local laws.

    83. Re:Competition Sucks by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      In absence of details about the locations where the protest are occurring, I don't venture an opinion one way or the other about the validity of the rules. Just the position that having them apply to taxi operators but not to Uber is hardly 'competitive'. Apparently, given their protests, the taxi operators would prefer the 'apply to both' option, while Uber would presumably prefer the 'apply to neither' option(at least if the alternative was a crackdown that actually forced them to comply or leave, I'm sure they don't mind at all the current situation of skirting the laws that their competitors are subject to.)

    84. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      What recourse does the passenger have if they get into an accident in their own car, or if a friend were driving them, or if they get hit by a random driver while crossing the street? There seem to be a lot of assumptions in your post that I, personally, don't find warranted.

    85. Re:Competition Sucks by nuggz · · Score: 1

      Why don't you just get the correct license or insurance.

      When I upgraded my car to allow light business use, it only cost a few dollars a year more.

    86. Re: Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Why do people think the government is charging for the medallions ? The cities don't have more medallions to issue, and they don't print them up for huge sums of money.
      Cabbies own the medallions, and cabbies sell them. It's not government, it's the FREE MARKET people love until it's too corrupt to get through the market entrance.

      Imagine that, Slashdot free market advocates upset by one free man with a medallion selling it for what the market supports to someone who wants it as part of a consensual transaction.

    87. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is no insurance. You agreed to release Uber from all liability as a condition of using the service. They have insurance in case that waiver is invalidated in court, which will take many months of time and many thousands of dollars in lawyers fees, but until them you have NO COVERAGE!

    88. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea' and with less business, how will the current cab companies launder drug and child sex money for the mob?
      Seriously, I bet cabs and limos are one of the best ways in the world to launder money...
      Cashed based, anonymous, large natural swings in income, distributed among many workers,etc.
      Want to launder a few hundred k? Well, lots of cabs out at a concert.. Including some that were never even there. Easy.

    89. Re:Competition Sucks by Noah+Haders · · Score: 1

      uber provides plenty of insurance stop gaps. what do you expect them to do? http://blog.uber.com/rideshari...

      fyi i get my facts from facts not from youtube videos. maru!

    90. Re:Competition Sucks by Etherwalk · · Score: 1

      If Uber were really offering legitimate competition, I would be more sympathetic. But they're partly undercutting existing taxis through ridiculous things like using drivers who lack commercial vehicle insurance, which is rather irresponsible.

      Competition doesn't have to be fair to be legitimate. Cab companies also generally underinsure to the extent permitted by law. In New York, they carry some ridiculously low number like $25,000 of insurance, and each cab is incorporated so that there's no way to get to the company that actually owns them.

      Fundamentally, if Uber can insure at least comparably to cab companies, are roughly as reliable, and can offer an equivalent service cheaper, they *should* win.

    91. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      Of course the taxis would like the rules to apply to both, because it would saddle their competition with outdated regulations that don't necessarily apply to them or make sense. For example, requiring a driver to have encyclopedic knowledge of the street map is next to useless in today's GPS world. Uber is a business and I'm sure they'd take whatever advantage they can get, but I'm sure they'd settle for reasonable rules for the modern age that applied equally to all. That seems fair to me and the hacks being obstructive (in both a physical and regulatory sense) is not going to win any fans to their side.

    92. Re:Competition Sucks by war4peace · · Score: 1

      "No, officer, he didn't pay jack shit, he's a distant relative, um, friend, um, acquaintance!"
      My colleague drives me home at the end of my shift, it's called carpooling. Carpooling could be arranged among strangers or people very loosely connected (e.g. working within the same neighborhood and living within the same other neighborhood).
      My workplace encourages carpooling and they even have an ongoing project to identify people who have similar routes during similar times. We're 2000-strong employees here so it makes sense. One person in each car add up to a lot of pollution and increase traffic jam. Using a cab has the same effect.

      Yes, I am sorry for those who would see their income diminished, but trying to keep that income without adapting is akin to people in the past banning cars because the horse-related jobs would be affected. It wouldn't work.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    93. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand?
      We have the best health care in the world.
      You mean we let people die if they don't have enough money???
      But Mitt told me that does not happen, you just go to the ER and you get the best health care in the entire universe.

    94. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ugh, a well-worded, reasonable and nuanced argument. Go away, you don't belong here!

    95. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Update: As others have pointed out, Uber already addresses the question of liability coverage by providing the coverage itself... so the potential problem arising from drivers not having coverage is already handled via another mechanism, making the law irrelevant (not inapplicable in a legal sense, just irrelevant in the sense that it's not actually accomplishing anything).

      Taxi forums show that the necessary full "legit" insurance can cost $50 US a day for a commercial taxi driver, those these will vary (and drop with an experienced cabbie)
      http://www.taxiforums.co.uk/Home/tabid/87/aff/3/aft/8552/afv/topic/Default.aspx

      Uber does not provide that level of insurance. It provides only insurance to the passenger, not the driver or third parties likely to be injured/killed/damaged in an accident and not at values that would reasonably cover one "WASP" fatality much less a couple of barrister's kids. The typical uber driver will be disowned by their non-commerical driver's insurance and on the hook for the entire amount. of damages. Since uber drivers tend not to be wealthy, that means that a severe injury and medical treatment will be paid for by the taxpayers since the uber driver will have to default on those huge debts. That's why licensed taxis actually have to carry high dollar/pound/euro insurance in the first place and why a cab costs much more than the price of gas.

    96. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and winning out because of better service.

      I thought it was because you found out how much prices "surged" after you got there, and were stuck with the bill.

    97. Re:Competition Sucks by Qzukk · · Score: 2

      Actually, in New York City, a Taxi Medallion (required on a per-car basis) is around a million dollars.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    98. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      A taxi driver in most of the countries involved is required to buy a license which costs as high as $250'000

      Where does a license cost that much?

      There may be a secondary market for licenses, where numbers are limited, but that's not money going to to the local government, it's money going to retiring taxi drivers.

    99. Re:Competition Sucks by praxis · · Score: 1

      Uber is playing by the rules (at least in the UK). In London you need a license to drive a cab and that license comes with various rules but also various benefits. Cabs are allowed to stop for passengers who flag them in the street, which Uber drivers and other services aren't. In the past this was fine with cabbies because it wasn't easy to get a non-cab quickly. Now with services like Uber it is often cheaper to do so.

      In London cab licenses are for 12 months. If Cab drivers think that they would be better off driving for Uber then they are free to stop paying for a license and to do so.

      If that's the case then I have no understanding of the situation.

    100. Re:Competition Sucks by Ravaldy · · Score: 1

      Officer: Are you being paid to carry this passenger?
      Driver: No, this is my friend. We are car pooling.
      Officer: Ok. Have a good day!

      PROVE IT. Nobody is going to get stopped for this.

    101. Re:Competition Sucks by dj245 · · Score: 1

      There are many legitimate reasons to limit the number of cars available for hire

      Granted, but such a crude tool like limiting the number of medallions is one of the old methods that made sense long ago, but doesn't any more. Without services like Uber it would be nearly impossible to implement a more modern, more efficient and more useful solution.

      They are pushing the boundaries and making people ask the right questions, which could lead to a "more efficient and more useful solution." My personal gripe is that people assume Uber's model is good, and deregulation is that more efficient and more useful solution. Obviously Uber does not mention the downsides themselves, and the number of people questioning their model as being good for society is typically not substantial.

      --
      Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
    102. Re:Competition Sucks by JD-1027 · · Score: 1

      Should license fees relate to driver having the knowledge of every street in town? Sounds like it might be better served by allowing competition.
      "XYZ Cab Company has more knowledgeable drivers, I'll use them"
      or
      "Uber is cheaper, so I'll use them".

    103. Re: Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For what it's worth from an American, London Black Cab drivers are absolutely the most skilled and conscientious city traffic drivers that I have seen anywhere in the world.

    104. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Exactly the possibility I stated in my last sentence.

      Which means this is an investment, not a cost. It wouldn't be worth paying a million dollars for a taxi badge, you would never make a big enough living to to make it worthwhile. But if you can buy one for 1 million dollars, use it for a couple of decades, then sell it for 1.5 million dollars, then you've profited in two ways.

      It's certainly not the local government making money from taxi driver licensing.

    105. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Not only that, but the Black Cabbies encyclopaedic knowledge of streets may not be significantly better than a Sat Nav with traffic info.

    106. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      I could say that my personal gripe is that people assume Uber's model is bad, and that deregulation will lead to anarchy. So let's agree that people who make unfounded assumptions should both be griped at.

      It's hard not to see that Uber is better in many ways than the existing model and it fills an important niche, so in that sense it's hard to say it's not good. There is certainly a case to be made that there are downsides, but I haven't seen any that aren't fixable. This is not to say that the current Uber model is the best possible, that it is the only viable system or that there shouldn't be a completely new set of regulations that apply to all services (e.g. a fair cost for traffic congestion based on time of day, miles driven, etc.).

    107. Re:Competition Sucks by lgw · · Score: 1

      Most states in the US have a "chauffeur license" needed to drive anyone commercially, that applies across taxis, livery cars (limos) and personal drivers. That should really be a requirement here for Lyft and similar services.

      Break the monopoly/oligopoly of taxis services in major cities. It's crony capitalism BS, and needs to go. But a "taxi permit" is a totally different thing than a commercial drivers license. We can end the taxi monopoly without any loss of useful regulation through basic licensing.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    108. Re:Competition Sucks by king+neckbeard · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying that they shouldn't, but rather, that revoking a license for something on a similar scale is a disproportionate.

      --
      This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    109. Re:Competition Sucks by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      If insurance doesn't cover you, then you may suffer enormous expense and go untreated (since no money is available for therapy). In some cases, you'll die due to lack of money for proper treatment.

      I speak from personal experience. Having insurance makes you safer if your injuries are serious.

      This is only for countries without good national health care. Even there, I think more serious or long term injuries might be prioritized lower.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    110. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 0

      Most states in the US have a "chauffeur license" needed to drive anyone commercially, that applies across taxis, livery cars (limos) and personal drivers. That should really be a requirement here for Lyft and similar services.

      Why?

    111. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do something bad, and pay insurance in the $$,$$$ or do it well and pay insurance in the $$$ ?
            There's quite a bit of difference in financials if the insurance is proportional to the risk.

    112. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How so? I heard the "black cabs" have a similar dispatch mechanism? I thought this is about Uber not following the rules. Ubir drivers are not required to pass "the knowledge" or pay the same licensing fees.

    113. Re:Competition Sucks by jythie · · Score: 1

      Anyone is free to get a license and provide a similar service. They are not trying to block out 'competition', they are trying to block a company that can provide lower prices by failing to pay the same costs people playing by the rules do.

    114. Re:Competition Sucks by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2

      From what I've read, it's more like.

      Passenger: "Uh, hi! Are you Dave from Uber?"

      Driver: "Yup- please hop in and we'll head to the zoo."

      Passenger: "Okay, here's the 17 dollars for the ride"

      Driver: "Thanks"

      Policemen Passenger: "And here's your $500 ticket. And btw, we'll be impounding your car so you need to find a ride home."

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    115. Re:Competition Sucks by PIBM · · Score: 1

      When you signup for your car insurance, and when you renew (at least in Canada), you are asked to provide the highest number of miles you might drive in the year. Should that mileage exceed your declaration by a large value upon a reclamation, you might run in some trouble.

    116. Re:Competition Sucks by jythie · · Score: 1

      Beyond that, all it takes are a few high profile 'things going wrong' to change the tide. Right now Uber is riding on a wave of support born out of low prices and political philosophy. However, taxi services developed these regulations over the years partly out of historical problems, problems Uber is not going to magically avoid.

      If the prices go up and the ideological good will they are getting starts to go away, no facy app is going to save them.

    117. Re:Competition Sucks by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      The problem occurs when the 'friend' is an idiot and lets the true relationship slip out when he's injured and unhappy with the payments.

      I say 'idiot' because only an idiot would rat out his driver when the consequence is that the insurance company gets to cancel the driver's insurance and NOT pay out for the accident, making the claims fall on the driver's personal assets. Good luck getting blood from a stone...

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    118. Re:Competition Sucks by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      That's where an extra rider would be handy. It wouldn't be bad if I simply paid an extra 5 cents or so per mile for my 'commercial' driving if I only do Uber during the highest demand periods when Uber jacks up the rates.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    119. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes.. Heaven forbid the insurance companies and regulatory services that offer 'licenses' don't get their share..

      These taxi drivers are just tools of their own demise - they just haven't realized it yet.

    120. Re:Competition Sucks by Pax681 · · Score: 2

      In what way? Do you have any evidence?

      well here in Scotland a taxi driver has to be vetted for criminal records etc, then licensed. If he is an owner/driver then his car has to be passed through a "TAXI MOT"(MOT being an annual test for all cars here BUT this one is more stringent).
      Also there is specific commercial insurance.... to suggest otherwise is just plain fucking ridiculous, seriously fucking ridiculous.
      For vehicles used for commercial/business application, most especially passenger transportation, then specialised commercial insurance is required.
      All private hire (ie non black taxi/hackney) vehicles licensed for passenger transportation have to display a special license plate on their rear bumper and also display this information, including the drivers taxi permit inside along with his photograph.
      This is why Uber has no operations in Scotland as far as i know... because they, most likely, would be illegal in some respect here or not up to spec in some way.

    121. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unsafe drivers will have their premiums raised to the point that being an Uber driver will no longer be profitable.

    122. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymice · · Score: 1

      At least in the UK, there is strict licensing for anyone who wants to take a passenger for commercial purposes. And there are different licences for different types of taxis. If they do not have a licence, then their insurance will be invalidated. The authorities crack down heavily on unlicensed drivers.
      To be honest, I would expect this to be the same around much of the rest of the world too.

      Evidence? My father runs a cab company, and also the fact you can't go anywhere in London without seeing scaremongering posters warning of the dangers of unlicensed taxis.

    123. Re:Competition Sucks by demonlapin · · Score: 2

      Because we routinely hold people who engage in some activity for profit to a higher standard than those that do it for fun. It's the difference between flying yourself and running an air taxi, between having friends over for dinner and opening a restaurant.

    124. Re:Competition Sucks by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      True, and calling the drivers self-employed, which is also a lie that moves more liability to the drivers and in the US frees uber of having to pay benefits etc...

      Can you provide any proof that the drivers are actually employees of Uber? To my knowledge they don't meet the IRS guidelines to be considered employees. Note: There may be exceptions for their explicit 'for hire' cars where Uber owns the vehicle in question. Heck, I think it was in a previous thread here that I read about an Uber driver talking about how he was also signing up to get leads/customers through Lyft and Sidecar.

      So, going from what IRS says:

      Facts that provide evidence of the degree of control and independence fall into three categories:
      Behavioral: Does the company control or have the right to control what the worker does and how the worker does his or her job?
      Financial: Are the business aspects of the worker’s job controlled by the payer? (these include things like how worker is paid, whether expenses are reimbursed, who provides tools/supplies, etc.)
      Type of Relationship: Are there written contracts or employee type benefits (i.e. pension plan, insurance, vacation pay, etc.)? Will the relationship continue and is the work performed a key aspect of the business?

      Behavioral: Uber does have conduct guidelines and will drop you if your customer satisfaction rate is too low. However, they do not set hours or even whether any given driver will take a given ride request.
      Financial: Uber takes a cut of any ride for providing it's service, but doesn't provide the car, only provides limited insurance coverage, doesn't pay an hourly rate, has the driver/operator worry about maintenance and such.
      Type of relationship: No employee type benefits, written contract. Driver can drop uber and work with other services at any time, and of course Uber isn't dependent upon any one driver. Heck, the drivers can work with multiple such services at the exact same time if they chose to do the work.

      My non-expert opinion: Uber has a strong case that the drivers are independent contractors, not employees. Signs of this are no hourly wages, drivers must provide their own licenses, insurance, and equipment, set their own hours, can decide whether to take any one job or not, and are not tied to Uber for providing driving services.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    125. Re:Competition Sucks by Pax681 · · Score: 1

      WRONG!.. in the case of Scotland certainly.
      all drivers of vehicles licensed to carry passengers on a commercial basis must be licensed themselves.
      Then the cars have to undergo safety checks and emissions tests and once the vehicle is licensed it must be appropriately insured with appropriate passenger liability insurance.
      Otherwise it's 100% illegal for people to charge fares for taking people anywhere commercially. plain and simple as that.
      In the case of Taxi drivers with a "Black cab license"(those who drive the classic London cabs) ... then those guys have to STUDY for a minimum of two years and sit an exam called "the knowledge" to show that they know well the geography of the area. And their vehicles taxi license plates, in Edinburgh anyway, SELL FOR A FUCKING FORTUNE.....
      The thing with Uber is that it is setting rates that are NOT set by the local councils Taxi licensing board. In Scotland each city council/local authority sets the rates for both black taxis and private hire cars such as Uber would be legally classified. Thus they are undercutting in a way that other companies would be legally disallowed from doing as the rates are set firm by the councils so as to avoid customers being humped.

      So as you an see, at least here in Scotland, and possibly in england,Waqles and northern Ireland too.... Uber would have to recruit drivers who were already licensed with licensed vehicles , start it's own fleet and get drivers in to drive them or... operate illegally and get humped in various courts and jurisdictions around the "UK"

    126. Re:Competition Sucks by digitig · · Score: 1

      Lawmakers in Britain don't have to do anything, as Uber is already able and does comply with all licensing requirements.

      That's in dispute. It hinges on whether the app that Uber divers use to calculate the fare constitutes a taximeter or not. Uber (and Transport for London) say it doesn't because there's no physical connection required with the vehicle, whereas the black cab and minicab drivers say it does because it's a device that calculates the fare based on measured distance travelled. The case has yet to come to court, and until it does nobody really knows whether it's legal or not (personally I suspect it isn't, but IANAL).

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    127. Re:Competition Sucks by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      You certainly do where I live in the US. A standard individual car insurance policy does not cover commercial activity - for example, delivering pizzas.

    128. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      But Uber in London and Manchester do every item that you've listed. Which is why they are legal. And I see no reason to suppose they won't also be able to operate in Edinburgh and Glasgow when they get round to it.

    129. Re:Competition Sucks by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      That's more like UberBlack and UberSUV. We're talking UberX, where you're picked up by a normal person using their personal vehicle.

    130. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't seem to understand is that the current player's in the taxi market put those regulations in force to keep competition out.

    131. Re:Competition Sucks by Pax681 · · Score: 1

      what puts the higher price on these vehicles license plates is that usually there is a limited number of them
      For example, Edinburgh city council limits the amount of black taxi vehicles plates to 300 in total(this is a made up number.. dunno how many it actually is)
      Now it might only cost you say £500 GBP to buy that plate from the council if you were the original purchaser. you see this plate can be transferred from one vehicle to the other. it outlives the vehicle and thus due to it's limited availability it can and does sell for FORTUNES at auctions held for the rare occasion they come up for sale.
      London is NOT unique in doing the "knowledge". I can only speak for Scotland however each council here requires all black hack drivers to do the knowledge for their license area... i just pity the poor fuckers in the Highlands who have a gargantuan area to commit to memory!

    132. Re:Competition Sucks by hurfy · · Score: 2

      As opposed to getting hit by john on his way home with the minimum required insurance. That's a whole 10k for property damage and $25k medical in my state. Which has been the same for quite some time. The numbers seem a little outdated to say the least. Anything past a bent bumper and broken arm and you probably have to sue him anyway :(

      Something seems a bit shady with them but it probably isn't the insurance issues. Of course the taxi business seems a bit odd on its own when they only allow X number or Y company to wait at the airport. Waiting 20 min for a taxi to show up at the airport was rather retarded.

      Rather doubtful any pay all the right taxes to all the right places, try that route.

    133. Re:Competition Sucks by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      I can vouch that in the United States, the GP is also wrong.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    134. Re:Competition Sucks by NotDrWho · · Score: 1

      Christ, no wonder NYC cabbies are always so pissed off.

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    135. Re:Competition Sucks by lgw · · Score: 1

      To have a higher bar, because there's almost no requirements for a basic drivers license, and you have to try really hard to get that basic license taken away.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    136. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      In the UK all Uber cars are licensed Private Hire vehicles, with licensed private hire drivers. Including UberX. There is no such casual driving with unlicensed vehicle such as you describe. It's illegal.

    137. Re:Competition Sucks by xelah · · Score: 1

      Insurance may price some riskier drivers out of the market, or insurance companies may refuse to offer insurance at all. And they may impose conditions, and provide incentives (in the form of lower premiums) to use risk-lowering techniques (like minimum vehicle standards, driving courses, recording devices and the like) and make different choices (cheaper to insure cars).

    138. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      That seems like a reason to increase the requirements for a basic driver's license, instead. If someone is a competent driver (whatever the state says that is) then that should be the same whether they are driving themselves, their friends, or a paid passenger. If they're not competent then they shouldn't be driving under any circumstances.

      I could see a case made that drivers who drive a large number of miles per day or per year could be subjected to more rigorous requirements, but that would equally apply to a Lyft driver or someone who had a very long commute, IMO. The goal there being that you don't decrease the number of bad drivers, just the relative number of bad drivers on the road at any given time.

    139. Re:Competition Sucks by Immerman · · Score: 1

      I imagine it would be no more difficult than proving prostitution: pose as a customer and arrest anyone who offers the service.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    140. Re:Competition Sucks by mythosaz · · Score: 1

      A license defines the narrow scope in which you're allowed to operate motor vehicles. A "regular" license generally says you can operate a passenger vehicle for personal and business use (where business doesn't include the business of transportation).

      Because they specifically make licenses for commercial drivers - you know, the kind that require additional certification or training, or come with further restrictions on the type of vehicle you can drive or the number of hours you can operate it without rest - you're violating the "regular" license you have by not getting a commercial one while operating as a commercial driver.

      Revocation of your license seems perfect.

      Go get the right training.
      Go take the right tests.
      Go get the right license.

    141. Re:Competition Sucks by jxander · · Score: 1

      True, but that's a tough charge to make stick.

      Are you operating a commercial driving service? No.
      But this is an Uber-car, it has the little logo.... I'm not working, just taking the car to get serviced.
      But you have a passenger in the back... Just a friend of mine, giving him a lift. It's on the way.

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      This signature is false.
    142. Re:Competition Sucks by John+Jorsett · · Score: 1

      How the heck does this make the public safer? It makes it more likely to get money from your opponent's insurance if he kills you on the street, but that's about it.

      Insurances never make anything more secure. They make the loss more bearable. At best.

      If insurance is a requirement and you can't get it because you're a risk, then you can't legally operate and the public is safer. QED. The big question is whether you'll enforce the requirement. If you don't enforce a law, it may as well not exist.

    143. Re:Competition Sucks by lgw · · Score: 1

      Why do you have a problem with the idea that transporting strangers for money should be held to a higher bar than driving yourself? Do you feel the same way about aircraft? (A private pilots license is easy to get, as it should be, but a commercial pilot license is a whole different world.) About restaurants?

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    144. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      London is NOT unique in doing the "knowledge". I can only speak for Scotland however each council here requires all black hack drivers to do the knowledge for their license area... i just pity the poor fuckers in the Highlands who have a gargantuan area to commit to memory!

      The highlands may be a large area, but there's not much in it.
      And a short set of multiple choice questions in a small city or rural county does not in any way compare with the London Knowledge. A local would be able to answer the Scottish tests. The London Knowledge takes years of study, travelling round and round London on a scooter, even for a Londoner. There is no city in the world that compares with The Knowledge in London. And certainly not in Scotland.

    145. Re:Competition Sucks by jxander · · Score: 1

      Entrapment. You can't hail an uber taxi on the street. Uber will never pull up and ask if you need a lift (lyft) You have you request them specifically via their website or phone app.

      If a cop calls you, asks you to perform an illegal action, and then arrests/tickets you for performing said illegal action: entrapment.

      --
      This signature is false.
    146. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      None of which is relevant given that Uber in the UK only employes licensed Private Hire drivers with licensed Private Hire cars.

    147. Re:Competition Sucks by jxander · · Score: 1

      But Uber/Lyft doesn't offer services to passing strangers. You can't raise you arm to hail an Uber-cab. You have to call them (via phone app) and specifically request a ride to/from a location.

      Similar loophole to all the craigs list prostitutes. A cop cannot respond to the ads and say "Hello, I would like to exchange money for sex," and then arrest anyone who says "OK." That would be entrapment.

      --
      This signature is false.
    148. Re:Competition Sucks by jxander · · Score: 1

      So, wait ... let me see if I understand this. The argument is that "real" taxi meters read the tires (tyres) to evaluate distance, but Uber uses GPS to evaluate distance. Thus Uber is not a proper taxi and not beholden to proper taxi laws?

      --
      This signature is false.
    149. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      I consistently feel the same way in all the cases you mentioned. I have no issues using "Luft" to have a private pilot in his Cessna fly me to Las Vegas for a fee - no special FAA license required as he is doing the exact same thing he has been qualified by them to do (take off, fly and land his plane safely). I have no problem with using "Lyfe" to hire a private chef to come to my house to prepare a meal for me without requiring a special food preparation license, inspections or oversight. I rely on the government to license the minimal skills required for the task and the services (Lyft, Luft and Life) themselves to inform me as to which providers go above and beyond that in terms of quality and professionalism.

    150. Re:Competition Sucks by nblender · · Score: 1

      I do not think that word means what you think it means.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E...

      If you were just some normal Joe Schlub who wouldn't even consider being an Uber driver, but some cop stopped you and induced you into driving him somewhere in exchange for a nice shiny $20 bill, then that's entrapment... If you are a registered Uber driver, and a cop reserves you, and you agree to drive the cop somewhere, then that it something you would normally do and is not entrapment.

      At least that's how I read it and have always understood it.

    151. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Taximeters were never meant to be a privilege. They are there to protect the public. They are specific approved machines, inspected and sealed by the licensing body, that sets a maximum charge for a journey. They have other requirements like the display has to be visible to the passenger, and there has to be a flag that indicates when a fare is being charged, also connected to the For Hire light.

      In none of the significant ways does an iPhone app match the legal description of a taximeter.

      If Black Cab drivers think they have a unique monopoly on the use of software that calculates a fee from a given distance and time, they are insane. But of course they are not insane, they are just grasping the only short straw they see, hoping to keep technology enabled competition at bay.

    152. Re:Competition Sucks by jxander · · Score: 1

      Well, if I were an uber driver, I would be unlikely to drive a cop somewhere.

      By showing up in plain clothes and not disclosing his intentions, he's induced me to the above offense which I would otherwise be unlikely to commit.

      --
      This signature is false.
    153. Re:Competition Sucks by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      You are in denial.

      The funny thing about people in denial is that when they finally actually get to court- about 99.9% of them collapse immediately because they really knew all along they were wrong.

      About .1% actually believe their crap and fight bitterly to the end. But they usually come off as crazy.

      In any case, you can verify what I said is already reality with a trivial google.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    154. Re:Competition Sucks by Immerman · · Score: 1

      True, but they could find someone offering sex for money and then offer to hire them, which is no longer entrapment.

      In criminal law, entrapment is a practice whereby a law enforcement agent induces a person to commit a criminal offense that the person would have otherwise been unlikely to commit

      In Uber it's even easier - anyone signed up as a driver is presumably intending to take on passengers, and their rating history will show that they have done so before, so it's very hard for them to argue that they would have been unlikely to commit the crime if the officer hadn't made the offer. With a good lawyer they could perhaps argue that they wouldn't have committed that *particular* instance of the crime without the officer's participation, but in a world where kids get sent to prison because a cute undercover officer talks them in to tracking down some drugs for them I doubt that will carry much weight.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    155. Re:Competition Sucks by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      If Uber was lobbying for getting rid of the cabbie license, or was requiring cabbie licenses, then you'd have a point. But they're not, so you don't.

    156. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      In any case, you can verify what I said is already reality with a trivial google.

      If he were willing and able to do that simple task he would have already. For some people reality is overrated.

    157. Re:Competition Sucks by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the insider who hold the licenses (usually gained with great effort) want to keep the outsiders out.

      Presumably because they paid quite a bit for them. It's not at all fair that someone else comes in to try and take your customers who hasn't had to do that.

    158. Re:Competition Sucks by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Otherwise, I do have a question: why the demand for "commercial insurance" in the first place?

      Because they are operating in a commercial manner. And considering that they are doing that, and driving much more than the average person, they are more likely to get into an accident.

      Also, most auto insurance setups actually do cover the passengers in your vehicle should they get injured, so, well - what's the beef?

      Most auto insurance setups will expressly NOT cover a crash or injury if it was determined that you were using your vehicle in a commercial manner, which is what this would be.

      One caveat, though: if the rider signed a waiver online that lists the risks, and requires him to acknowledge and agree to them before ordering a ride, he very well wouldn't have much of a case unless the driver were drunk or high or etc.

      I would posit that any such waiver be invalid.

    159. Re:Competition Sucks by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

      That makes no sense.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    160. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      Whether or not it is fair depends on how much you paid for those licenses and how much you got out of them, doesn't it? If you weren't making a lot of extra money per year because of the license than you were a fool for buying it in the first place. If you bought one last month and haven't had a chance to recoup some of the costs then you're a fool for not seeing the potential risk to your business from Uber, Lyft, et al.

    161. Re: Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You, sir, are an idiot. It's obviously not a free market if you can't enter it without first buying a medallion, the number of which is limited BY THE GOVERNMENT. It matters not a damn who's doing the selling if the government forbids entering the market without the correct medallion.

    162. Re:Competition Sucks by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      How in the bloody hell is that entrapment?

      If a cop calls you, asks you to perform an illegal action, and then arrests/tickets you for performing said illegal action: entrapment.

      No, that definition is completely incorrect. If they coerce you into performing an action that you otherwise would not have done, that is entrapment. It would be almost impossible for someone who is signed up as an Uber/Lyft driver to argue this, as they very clearly would have done the action without the police around.

    163. Re:Competition Sucks by alexander_686 · · Score: 1

      Economist calls it "Rent Seeking". Taxi drivers make surplus profits because there is an artificial scarcity in the market.

      Barons used to give the King sacks of gold to collect rent from lands forever. Just because Barons paid big bucks does not mean it is right. Society would be overall better off if the cap were abolished. If you want to argue that taxi drivers are not nobility and should not be punished the answer is not to keep the system in place. The city could buy out the licenses and lift the requirements. Slowly flood the market over 10 to 20 years. Etc.

      On the other hand, most cities regulate cab fares down, cutting into their profits. Instead of positions trying to figure out the right balance between the number of cabs and fare I would vote for the free market.

    164. Re:Competition Sucks by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Uh, no. That's not at all how it works. That's like a drug dealer saying he wouldn't have sold the drugs if he knew the person was a cop.

    165. Re:Competition Sucks by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Ummm, no? They very much can do that, and it is not entrapment. Because the person was doing it anyway, they were not coerced by the cop.

    166. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      Because we routinely hold people who engage in some activity for profit to a higher standard than those that do it for fun.

      That is far from a universal standard, but even if it were I'm asking why that should be?

      It's the difference between flying yourself and running an air taxi, between having friends over for dinner and opening a restaurant.

      Opening a restaurant or flying a jumbo jet are large operations that require special skills and special attention from the government. An individual who flies you in his private plane which he has flown a hundred times or a cook who comes to your house to cook for you should not need a special license or qualification, even if they're paid. I also don't see the need to license every pizza delivery boy, maid, gardener, or babysitter either. Perhaps a business which employees them, but not they themselves.

    167. Re:Competition Sucks by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that the only Uber drivers I'll find are those with commercial licenses? Given how it operates here in the states, I find that notion completely laughable.

    168. Re:Competition Sucks by alexander_686 · · Score: 1

      But this is a insider's response.

      If you want to braid hair you need to spend 3 to 12 months getting licenses. The hair stylist association claims it is to learn health and safety. In reality it is to keep people out.

      I think it is a reasonable question to ask why commercial drivers need to pass a higher standard. It can't be because they are on the road more. I know traveling salesmen who put on far more miles than taxi drivers. For example, are additional sections needed because limos and minibuses are longer and heavier than passage cars?

    169. Re:Competition Sucks by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      If the iPhone app doesn't match the legal description of a taximeter, then that would be a strike against Uber, as they're not using one.

    170. Re:Competition Sucks by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      How is me driving with a stranger more likely to result in an accident than me driving with a friend?

      Just one ride? It won't. However, someone who's doing this is likely going to be driving far more than your average driver. Which is where the more likely to result in an accident thing comes from.

      Also, the "higher risk" is mostly due to commercial drivers driving ALL the time while "normal" drivers will only do so when they need the car, i.e. the higher risk is due to them being on the road far more often and far longer.

      Exactly.

      That's not the case with commercial car sharing because they only get to tag along.

      No. That's not at all how these services work.

    171. Re:Competition Sucks by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Wait, why would Uber have a lower license cost than the cabbies who know the town?

    172. Re: Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So let me get this straight... Cabbies knowingly sign up to a deal where it will take them fifteen years to recoup the cost of their license, because they are willing to bet that the government will fine or jail anyone who tries to enter the market without that license, at which point they can make a living taking advantage of an artificial bottleneck in the market placed and retained through the threat of force, and which makes life cost more for everyone who wants to use a taxi service, then act all pissed when a technological advance means that the people at whose expense they were willing to profit for life suddenly get a service they prefer? Color me unsympathetic.

    173. Re:Competition Sucks by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Around here, cab drivers are far worse drivers than private citizens.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    174. Re:Competition Sucks by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      Isn't it already standard to have your license at least suspended if you're caught driving uninsured? I don't think I'm proposing some kind of new policy, just enforcing the existing one.

    175. Re:Competition Sucks by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      Interesting, that seems pretty recent. From some googling around, it looks like they introduced it a few months ago. I definitely remember some interviews with their CEO last year where he was strongly insisting that they had no obligation to offer such insurance. Perhaps his lawyers overruled him?

    176. Re:Competition Sucks by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      But you have a passenger in the back... Just a friend of mine, giving him a lift. It's on the way.

      Wouldn't it be pretty easy for police to disprove this claim by subpoenaing Uber's records? If a car is carrying an Uber passenger, Uber has that information, timestamped and with the driver's name and a log of GPS coordinates, all stored in the trip record.

    177. Re:Competition Sucks by N1AK · · Score: 1

      If that's the case then I have no understanding of the situation.

      You must be new to discussing on the internet. You're supposed to claim I'm lying and insult me ;)

    178. Re:Competition Sucks by swillden · · Score: 1

      Or maybe they just decided it was the easiest way to make that particular issue go away.

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    179. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      Even if they have no legal obligation it may still make sense from a business or public relations standpoint.

    180. Re:Competition Sucks by praxis · · Score: 1

      If that's the case then I have no understanding of the situation.

      You must be new to discussing on the internet. You're supposed to claim I'm lying and insult me ;)

      Why? You presented pretty clear evidence that I failed to consider. Rather than waste both of our times, I cede the point.

    181. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      However, someone who's doing this is likely going to be driving far more than your average driver. Which is where the more likely to result in an accident thing comes from.

      Which is why insurance for all drivers would be more accurate if they charged per mile driven, rather than use this crude estimation.

      Also, the "higher risk" is mostly due to commercial drivers driving ALL the time while "normal" drivers will only do so when they need the car, i.e. the higher risk is due to them being on the road far more often and far longer.

      If drivers are significantly more likely to get into an accident because they are tired and overworked (see Tracy Morgan incident) then they should be taken off the road, not charged more for insurance.

    182. Re:Competition Sucks by swillden · · Score: 1

      Uber does not provide that level of insurance. It provides only insurance to the passenger, not the driver or third parties

      No. Uber provides coverage up to $1M per accident in automobile liability insurance. So any liability arising from the auto accident is covered.

      http://blog.uber.com/ridesharinginsurance

      http://blogcdn.uber.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/commercial-insurance-policy.pdf

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    183. Re:Competition Sucks by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      But the taxi companies DO have to pay for the licenses, so when uber bypasses all the laws and regulations then it is indeed unfair to those who do follow the rules. In other words, uber is cheating and making up excuses about it. It's like when amazon failed to collect sales tax and people used them precisely because they were cheaper than the competition which had to collect tax, then politicians naively backed them up for fear that the internet would be killed if they tried to enforce existing rules.

      If there are existing rules, then protest those rules if you don't like them. But breaking the rules is absolutely unfair to the competition that feels compelled to follow them because of ethics or morality. There is essentially zero difference between uber and a traditional limousine service except for a hipster phone app.

    184. Re:Competition Sucks by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Well then, I'm going to be hip and disruptive by violating all sorts of rules. No more taxes for me, and I'll jaywalk whenever I want (those silly traffic rules are for stupid people and not me), I'll open up a day care center in my home (it's ok because I'll have a phone app for it which makes it different and not subject to rules), and dammit, I'm going to mix my recyclables in with my garbage! Disruption!

    185. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      Good for you! I fully support your efforts to get rid of ridiculous, outdated laws - you are truly a man of principle. Of course, part of being such a standup guy is paying the price when you get caught, even if it's unfair, so you should be prepared for that too.

      I'm totally with you that jaywalking should not be a crime when it does not cause a hazard, but you're going to have to explain to me why you think zipping through a red light should not be illegal or that a day care need not be licensed.

      Breaking laws just because you think you're special and you think you can get away with it just makes you an asshole. Not getting a license for your daughter to babysit a neighbor == principle. Not getting a license to run a day care with dozens of toddlers == asshole. Can you really not see a difference?

    186. Re:Competition Sucks by lrocker · · Score: 1

      Insurances never make anything more secure. They make the loss more bearable. At best.

      Insurance makes many activities safer. See IIHS in the US for example.
      At my place of work, Fire regulations are rudimentary and almost laughable. But when the insurance inspector pays a visit, we snap to attention and clean up our act. They have far more stringent requirements for things like fire safety and business continuity planning, and there's money on the line if we don't follow their recommended best practices.

    187. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      But breaking the rules is absolutely unfair to the competition that feels compelled to follow them because of ethics or morality.

      It wasn't until I saw this part that I realized your entire post was meant to be ironic. Good job, made me laugh.

    188. Re:Competition Sucks by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I think that's a global problem.

      Maybe that's the real reason why they pay a higher premium?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    189. Re:Competition Sucks by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      I get (and mostly agree with) your point, but a license to drive a cab/limo is barely more expensive than a regular one - in my state, $5 more every four years. It does require a medical exam and a scheduled road test, but those are one-time expenses. It's not like a year-long training program.

    190. Re:Competition Sucks by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      The guy who flies a private plane has already undergone an FAA medical exam. In my state, at least, the medical exam and a slightly more strenuous road test is the only real difference between a private driver's license and a taxi/limo driver's license (vehicles holding 16 or more people are different, which is why they make 15-passenger vans). That's not a big barrier to entry.

    191. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If insurance doesn't cover you, then you may suffer enormous expense and go untreated (since no money is available for therapy). In some cases, you'll die due to lack of money for proper treatment.

      I speak from personal experience. Having insurance makes you safer if your injuries are serious.

      This is only for countries without good national health care. Even there, I think more serious or long term injuries might be prioritized lower.

      ok, so this is London, with universal free healthcare. The insurance in question is about covering cost of car damages and other accident damages. If you total your car while Uber'ing, you might not get it reimbursed with normal car insurance. Of course all will get the necessary medical treatment regardless of wallet/insurance, something else would be barbaric.

      A more interesting question when comparing taxis and Uber is quality and safety control. There is a reason pirate taxis are outlawed most places, you don't know what you are getting into when you enter the car of a stranger offering a service with absolutely no regulation or control.

    192. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Legally mandated insurance in Germany for private drivers is at least 7.5 million Euros for personal-injuries libability [1]. $1M is a joke for commercial drivers.

      [1] in german: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kfz-Haftpflichtversicherung#Deckungssumme

    193. Re:Competition Sucks by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      There is a free market, if you think a taxi is too expensive then don't get in it.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    194. Re:Competition Sucks by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      Make sure you ask him if he's a cop. If he is he totally has to say yes.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    195. Re:Competition Sucks by king+neckbeard · · Score: 1

      For commercial passenger transport, I think a moderate fine would be more appropriate, and maybe a point on your insurance. Revocation of a license isn't typical for driving above weight, which I would say is a bigger infraction.

      --
      This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    196. Re:Competition Sucks by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      So basically, the tax cartel in Scotland has successfully erected numerous barriers to entry that prevent competitors from entering the market. Congratulations, I guess, if you're proud of that sort of thing.

    197. Re:Competition Sucks by alexander_686 · · Score: 1

      Not beaning forced to buy a good makes it a market - it does not make it free market however. A free market would allow competitors to enter the market which they can't.

    198. Re:Competition Sucks by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      Evidently they can as there are always new firms opening and new drivers starting.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    199. Re:Competition Sucks by alexander_686 · · Score: 1

      No they can't. Read further up the thread. Most cities, and all the cities the article cites, have a limit on the number of cabs. All of these cities have hit their limit ages ago. When new licenses are issued they are costly. Last I heard New York was selling newly minted licenses at over a million.

      The entire points of the licenses are to constrain the number of cabs out there at an artificially low level – that is the limiting factor on new competitors. I am arguing it should be the free market that determines it.

      See this link for more info.
      http://www.npr.org/blogs/money...

    200. Re: Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And havimg thousands of drivers without the same licenses required by other commercial for hire drivers equals what exactly?

    201. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Uber UK doesn't hire them unless they are licensed private hire drivers. And you can't get a private hire license without a driving license, commercial insurance, a criminal records check, etc.

      So yes you won't find one that hasn't.

      I don't care how laughable you find it. Not everywhere is like the states.

    202. Re:Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      No. Uber cars are licensed Private Hire Vehicles, which in London are not allowed to have Taximeters. Only Taxis are. It makes no sense, but that's the way it is.

      In other cities in the UK, the situation varies: some allow private hire vehicles to have taximeters, some require it.

    203. Re: Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the fine for driving a rig over weight, ..... With the wrong license ?

      Do you get to drive the truck away, or is your trip over ?

    204. Re:Competition Sucks by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      Bah - tax*i* cartel....

    205. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're arguing that $1M is not enough, then obviously there should be regulation that requires a reasonable amount. I actually agree with you that 1M is way too little, but just assuming that other assets could cover damages is too optimistic for my taste, after all, the medallion, cars and offices may all be bought on loans and are a liability, not an asset.

    206. Re: Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that taxi drivers are often government regulated and licensed place a higher cost on the taxi driver then an uber driver. This basically makes it unfair competition ... clarify and solve the regulation issue so a level playing field exists and then we can talk about competition.

    207. Re:Competition Sucks by jxander · · Score: 1

      If the crimes against Uber and it's ilk were such a slam dunk, then why haven't the cops been ticketing them in droves. According to a Washington Post article last month, Uber is adding close to 20,000 drivers per month. Law enforcement could generate millions by simply issuing citations to them all (plus Lyft, Sidecar, and any others). But they don't. And it's not like they're hard to spot. Uber-taxis have a neon blue U in their window

      So you've gotta ask yourself, why aren't Ubers getting ticketted in droves? Do you think Law Enforcement lets them slide out of the goodness of their hearts and a true desire to see the small upstart companies battle the entrenched establishment? Or just because they can't.

      --
      This signature is false.
    208. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my hometown, the big deal is that, while the taxis aren't part of the $1M medallion game, they're required by law to serve all areas of the city and required to serve low-income and disabled people at a lower rate (they get local govt subsidies for this, although those aren't equivalent to regular fares). All licensed taxi drivers are also required to be trained in assisting the disabled.

      Unfortunately if Lyft/Uber, who are supposedly not required to serve the disabled or low-income parts of town, start taking away the paying fares that make money for the cab companies, then either the low-income areas and the disabled lose transportation options as the taxi companies cut back or the government has to step in and provide options at taxpayer cost. Or, you know, leave them hung out to dry.

    209. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is entirely possible that the taxi drivers themselves caused the regulations to happen in an attempt to raise the barrier of entry, such that anyone else attempting to crowd their market would find it extremely difficult to participate. There are no rules limiting the number of cars on the road, or of businesses that sell a product in a city. Why is the taxi license (the "medallion") supply limited ? To keep the prices up. Why are the prices high ? to account for the $1M cost of the "medallion" that everyone has to pay. This is an artificial cost many times over what the actual cost to operate a taxi cab is.

    210. Re:Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      It may not be a huge barrier, but it's still an unnecessary barrier without a legitimate or fair purpose, IMO. At one point it probably made sense to license drivers who you call to your house or who pick you up on the street - it provided at least a minimal level of safety and reliability for customers. In cities or countries with high crime and corrupt or incompetent police it might still make sense. However, now that just about everyone in most western countries has a mobile phone and internet the safety and accountability has gone way up so the barriers to entry should likewise go down.

    211. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it's just driving a passenger around for money. I've done that with friends and acquaintances quite a few times, albeit in a less formal setting.

      Except commercial drivers do way more miles, and have a stronger incentive to complete rides quickly. You don't drive your friends as frequently or as hurriedly as a cab/Uber driver does.

      It's the job of insurance companies - not king neckbeard - to estimate how risky something is. Unless you're willing to pay for any commercial driving-related damages like they do? Seriously, if you operate heavy machinery with no insurance you're basically selling everyone else out for your own profit, to say "oops" when you smash someone.

    212. Re:Competition Sucks by jopsen · · Score: 1

      My non-expert opinion: Uber has a strong case that the drivers are independent contractors, not employees.

      I don't dispute that this is the case under US law... My problem is with this practice of doing this... In the US the same happens to taxi drivers and pizza delivery drivers.
      I find it distasteful to cut costs on people who have very little income. Sometimes these people makes below minimum wage. It seems to me like they are trying to exploit the little man. Because people do drive taxies, uber and deliver pizzas for a living, making them contractors is a distasteful way to cut money from people who make very little.

    213. Re:Competition Sucks by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      It seems to me like they are trying to exploit the little man. Because people do drive taxies, uber and deliver pizzas for a living, making them contractors is a distasteful way to cut money from people who make very little.

      I think that at least the pizza places got slapped down for trying to say their drivers were independent contractors. Taxi drivers are more complicated.

      Remember it's about control. A true independent contractor has to have much more freedom in controlling how they work. Like I mentioned, somebody who's driving 'for' Uber can actually decide his or her own hours, work with competing dispatch companies, decide on what individual fares to accept or not accept with the only penalty being not getting paid for that individual job.

      If the pizza driver isn't being allowed to also deliver competitor's pizzas or even pull jobs for Uber during slow periods they aren't a contractor.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    214. Re:Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uber does not provide that level of insurance. It provides only insurance to the passenger, not the driver or third parties

      No. Uber provides coverage up to $1M per accident in automobile liability insurance. So any liability arising from the auto accident is covered.

      http://blog.uber.com/ridesharinginsurance

      http://blogcdn.uber.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/commercial-insurance-policy.pdf

      Hardly. From your own link it drops to as low as $0 and that's assuming the insurance company decides they have to pay out in the first place:

      $50,000/$100,000/$25,000 of contingent coverage between trips.** During the time that a ridesharing partner is available but between trips, most personal auto insurance will provide coverage. However the driver is also backed by an additional policy that covers driver liability for bodily injury up to $50,000/individual/accident with a total of $100,000/accident and up to $25,000 for property damage. This policy is contingent to a driver’s personal insurance policy, meaning it will only pay if the personal auto insurance completely declines or pays zero. This policy meets or exceeds the requirements for 3rd party liability insurance in every state in the U.S.

      So if the primary insurer decides to issue a $0.01 check, Uber says FU.

      Why bother commenting if you don't actually know what you claim to know?

  2. Disruptive technology by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 1

    That is why they call it Disruptive Technology... in this case the reaction is quite literally disruptive.

    1. Re:Disruptive technology by ArcadeMan · · Score: 0

      The required licenses must be expensive for a reason. Insurances, liabilities, warranties, security, etc. If you bypass all that, it's like a store selling items on the sidewalk with no rent or taxes to pay. Sure it's cheaper, but if something goes wrong, you're SOL.

    2. Re:Disruptive technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We need more disruptive technology. Things don't change without it. Outmoded methods need to go the way of the dinosaur.

    3. Re:Disruptive technology by Firethorn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The required licenses must be expensive for a reason.

      Existing taxi companies lobby for restrictions on the number of cars... No reductions for them, of course. But we have to 'keep the roads clear'.

      A LOT of the taxi requirements in many areas* amount to anti-competitive measures along the lines of the rules that ban Tesla from selling cars in many states due to independent franchise requirements.

      *given that taxi rules will vary down to cities in most cases,

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    4. Re:Disruptive technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet, if you get in to an accident with passengers your personal insurance is often adequate enough to deal with it. " Insurances, liabilities, warranties, security" - this is all **bullshit**. No special knowledge (except perhaps route knowledge, which anyone can gain with experience) is required to drive a car with "Taxi" written on it.

      Commercial insurance doesn't offer any more protection or security than personal insurance does. They charge more because they can, not because it conveys any real benefit.

    5. Re:Disruptive technology by JMZero · · Score: 1

      Taxi licenses/medallions aren't really about any of that - they're about limiting the number of taxis. After that, it's just supply and demand as medallions are resold.

      For an example of how crazy this gets: http://blogs.reuters.com/felix...

      So the reasonable complaint here would be something like "there'll be too many taxis if their numbers aren't capped somehow" or "the competition here is completely unfair". Insurance (and associated regulation) would mostly be a separate matter, and have very little to do with that $200,000.

      --
      Let's not stir that bag of worms...
    6. Re:Disruptive technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The required licenses must be expensive for a reason.

      Existing taxi companies lobby for restrictions on the number of cars... No reductions for them, of course. But we have to 'keep the roads clear'.

      A LOT of the taxi requirements in many areas* amount to anti-competitive measures along the lines of the rules that ban Tesla from selling cars in many states due to independent franchise requirements.

      *given that taxi rules will vary down to cities in most cases,

      Some professions have a closed number. Think doctors or notaries for instance. Do you find that anticompetitive ?
      Taxi drivers is just one of those professions. If you make it so that there are too few taxis in a city it doesn't work, the same if you give a licence to anybody. Too many taxis and you end up with each taxi not making enough for a living.
      There has to be an equilibrium somewhere. And no sometimes the market does not self regulate, hence laws and regulations. Uber is a taxi system without calling it explicitely a taxi system. It evades the rules and regulations put by the legislator to enforce a viable taxi system. Hence why taxis are demonstrating in london, madrid, paris, berlin, rome etc... It's not a small issue and no I'm not a taxi driver.

    7. Re:Disruptive technology by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

      The reaction is an illegal impedance of traffic, disrupting economic activity and costing millions of dollars. In the United States, peaceful protests are protected speech; physically impeding the movement of any person is not peaceful protest, and you can be arrested if your protest does not part and allow safe passage to all who don't care for your shenanigans. Clogging the streets in protest is, thus, a criminal act; I would be surprised if the UK considered such things legal, rather than an organized protectionist racket.

    8. Re:Disruptive technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reaction is an illegal impedance of traffic, disrupting economic activity and costing millions of dollars. In the United States, peaceful protests are protected speech; physically impeding the movement of any person is not peaceful protest, and you can be arrested if your protest does not part and allow safe passage to all who don't care for your shenanigans. Clogging the streets in protest is, thus, a criminal act; I would be surprised if the UK considered such things legal, rather than an organized protectionist racket.

      The right to strike is one of those rights you silly americans don't have. or had in the past and have forgotten about it.
      To strike is absolutely legal in europe.

    9. Re:Disruptive technology by jandrese · · Score: 2

      The required licenses must be expensive for a reason

      The reason is to create a barrier to entry into the taxicab market so the established players can charge higher fares. That's the only thing those licenses provide. The cab companies are complaining about the system that they themselves set up.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    10. Re:Disruptive technology by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      There's a closed number of doctors?

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    11. Re:Disruptive technology by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      You can strike and protest in America, too. But you can't block access to public roadways nor can you block entrance and egress to the employer you're striking from. At that point the protest is no longer peaceful, as force is being used to block free access.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    12. Re:Disruptive technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a closed number of doctors?

      Some faculties have closed numbers. Veterinary for instance. Medical school at least in certain european countries is another. Notary is also a profession where the number is closed.
      Why are you surprised ? Oh yeah you're an american I bet. :)

    13. Re:Disruptive technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can strike and protest in America, too. But you can't block access to public roadways nor can you block entrance and egress to the employer you're striking from. At that point the protest is no longer peaceful, as force is being used to block free access.

      You can certainly block public roadways in Europe.
      You just cannot block the police, emergency systems like ambulances and firemen. All else is fair game.
      A strike is useful if it momentarily disrupts the system. Else it serves no purpose.

      Have you ever found yourself in the middle of an RATP strike ? RATP is the company that serves the tube in Paris. Pure Caos. There are of course some limits, you have to assure transport early in the morning and late at night. But in between you're out of luck.

    14. Re:Disruptive technology by meta-monkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The fascist control of doctors in America comes indirectly via the American Medical Association. They only accredit so many medical schools, and medical schools can only take so many students. But there isn't a hard limiting of doctors like there is taxi cab drivers via the medallion system.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    15. Re:Disruptive technology by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      I was in France during a transit strike a few years back. We were taking a train from Paris to Bordeaux and they still ran the train, they refused to take anybody's tickets. People just hopped on and we wound up spending the trip on the floor of a baggage train.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    16. Re:Disruptive technology by N1AK · · Score: 2

      If you make it so that there are too few taxis in a city it doesn't work, the same if you give a licence to anybody. Too many taxis and you end up with each taxi not making enough for a living.
      There has to be an equilibrium somewhere. And no sometimes the market does not self regulate, hence laws and regulations. Uber is a taxi system without calling it explicitely a taxi system. It evades the rules and regulations put by the legislator to enforce a viable taxi system. Hence why taxis are demonstrating in london, madrid, paris, berlin, rome etc... It's not a small issue and no I'm not a taxi driver.

      It's nonsense to think that taxi services need a state mandated 'correct number' to operate. They don't across the vast majority of the earth's surface and yet taxi services still exist pretty much everywhere. If there are too many taxi drivers and costs go down then less drivers will enter the market and more will leave, when prices go up it will draw in more supply. Of all occupations this is likely one of the best examples of one where the free market can quickly come to an equilibrium. It's extremely naive to assume that regulation is automatically proof that the market can't self regulate. Just look at the price of taxi medallions in New York which is a system created in the 1930s to see how badly wrong regulation can go if allowed to continue because "regulation must be needed if regulation already exists". Taxi drivers aren't demonstrating in the UK because Uber avoids regulations. They're demonstrating because their market is being taken from them.

    17. Re:Disruptive technology by N1AK · · Score: 1

      The right to strike is one of those rights you silly americans don't have. or had in the past and have forgotten about it.
      To strike is absolutely legal in europe.

      That silly American seems smart enough to know the difference between striking, and blocking a public highway; the fact you don't doesn't bode well for assessments of your intelligence...

    18. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Uber is a taxi system without calling it explicitely a taxi system. It evades the rules and regulations put by the legislator to enforce a viable taxi system. Hence why taxis are demonstrating in london, madrid, paris, berlin, rome etc... It's not a small issue and no I'm not a taxi driver.

      False, false and false. In London Uber is a Private Hire Car company, obeying all the rules and regulations. The London licensing body has come out and said as much.

      It's nonsense to think that taxi services need a state mandated 'correct number' to operate. They don't across the vast majority of the earth's surface and yet taxi services still exist pretty much everywhere. If there are too many taxi drivers and costs go down then less drivers will enter the market and more will leave, when prices go up it will draw in more supply. Of all occupations this is likely one of the best examples of one where the free market can quickly come to an equilibrium.

      They will obviously come to an equilibrium regarding the earnings and the number of drivers. But there is no guaranteeing that that equilibrium will actually be good for anyone. That equilibrium may be at the poverty level, which wouldn't be good for drivers. It may be at the level where streets are clogged with taxis, which wouldn't be good for other road users. It may be at a level where it's impossible to get a taxi to certain locations or times of day (The famous "I don't go south of the River".)

      The Taxi market is certainly one where the tragedy of the commons MIGHT apply.

    19. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Thankfully in Britain we still live in a democracy, and people are allowed to demonstrate. Demonstrations normally involve disrupting something. Indeed the police knew about the protest and limited it to one hour. Though I don't know whether the Taxi Drivers pushed it for longer.

      What you do or believe in the USA is of no significance.

    20. Re:Disruptive technology by king+neckbeard · · Score: 1

      You've provided some factual statements, but not justifications for such policies. AFAIK, we don't have those limits because the market works better for sorting those things out.

      --
      This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    21. Re:Disruptive technology by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

      So if I come to your house, stand on the sidewalk, and refuse to let you reach your car so that you can go to work because you work for a disgusting coal power plant that spews radioactive mercury waste into the sky, that's legal?

    22. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 2

      That sounds like secondary picketing. Which is illegal. What the taxi drivers did was:
      a) Demonstrating, not picketing.
      b) Where they work. Not in a secondary place.

    23. Re:Disruptive technology by cheesybagel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Some professions have a closed number. Think doctors or notaries for instance. Do you find that anticompetitive ?

      Yes.

      Milton Friedman - The Real World Effects Of Unions.

    24. Re:Disruptive technology by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

      I thought "where they work" was "the public roadway", meaning it's impossible for people to drive on those roadways to go from their house to their place of work, their place of shopping, a restaurant, and so on.

      In the US, you are allowed to have a voice; you are not allowed to restrict the movement of others. You can picket in the streets or in front of businesses or in town square in front of city hall all you want; but when someone wants to pass, you move out of the way. You can raise signs and call them bad names, but you can't impede them.

      This stems largely from the concept of a peaceful protest being peaceful, rather than forceful. Unions engage in peaceful protest all the time; you're allowed to cut a picket line, and they have to let you through. In some cases, the protesters refused to move, while a wage-worker who depended on the income from actually working their job wanted to pass. Abusive language coupled with a desperate need to collect paychecks to feed families eventually transitions to fists and broken faces, which is suddenly not peaceful; we like to interpret the forceful barring of entry to the place of work as passive-aggressive, and prohibit that sort of thing.

      The opposite behavior is completely separate, but also comes up here: sometimes people throw buckets of animal blood at other people, both at abortion clinics and fur shops. That's direct aggression, rather than passive aggression, and, I would assume, is universally illegal.

    25. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Again, what happens in the US is irrelevant.

      What the taxi drivers did in London was perfectly acceptable, legal, and even approved by the police (for a limited period.)

    26. Re:Disruptive technology by omnichad · · Score: 1

      But by blocking the road, which is explicitly illegal - at least according to the UK Government's own interpretation:
      https://www.gov.uk/industrial-...
      http://www.bis.gov.uk/assets/b...

    27. Re:Disruptive technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget to add a number of US cities with the same complaint against Uber.

      Seems all Slashdot does is discuss how the black cabs are complaining and they wrong, free markets, etc.
      If that is the case, why are US cities also complaining?

      Didn't Boston just have similar "protests" recently?

      "
      The rally aimed to draw the attention of the mayor and police commissioner, who have the power to regulate UberX in Boston. “Our initial goal is to get them [Uber] out of the city,” says Blythe-Shaw, but if that’s not possible, “we want a level playing field”: everyone following the same regulations
      "

    28. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      I already pointed out it wasn't a picket, it was a demonstration.

    29. Re:Disruptive technology by omnichad · · Score: 3, Informative

      Those pages are about pickets, but refer to laws that cover any demonstration.

      Article 11 of the Convention of Human Rights (1998):

      (1) Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and to freedom of association with others, including the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests.

      (2) No restrictions shall be placed on the exercise of these rights other than such as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others. This Article shall not prevent the imposition of lawful restrictions on the exercise of these rights by members of the armed forces, or the police, or of the administration of the State.

      The important part of this is "for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others." In UK law, use of the highway is considered a legal right. A partial blockage of a road is OK, but a total blockage infringes on the rights of others.

    30. Re:Disruptive technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In europe, blocking the road is peaceful as long as you don't use violence. I.e. protest by parking in the middle of the road is peaceful, all you get is the usual fine for such behaviour. Of course, you have to put up with the eventual towing, if you want to stay non-violent.

    31. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 0

      In UK law, use of the highway is considered a legal right.

      No it's not. There are plenty of ways on which you can be quite legally prevented from progressing down a road.

      And as I already pointed out the police approved this demonstration, just as they approve most other demonstrations, most of which disrupt traffic.

    32. Re:Disruptive technology by Firethorn · · Score: 2

      Some professions have a closed number. Think doctors or notaries for instance. Do you find that anticompetitive?

      Yes, and the point is?

      If there's too many taxis to the point nobody can make money they'll go out of business until the number is at a sustainable level, with only the most efficient surviving.

      Same with doctors, really. Increase the number of doctors and availability would increase even as you need to work them fewer hours.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    33. Re:Disruptive technology by j-beda · · Score: 1

      Commercial insurance doesn't offer any more protection or security than personal insurance does. They charge more because they can, not because it conveys any real benefit.

      In a competitive market, the differences in price between "personal" and "commercial" insurance prices would depend primarily on the statistics - I would not be surprised to find that for a taxi-like business there are more insurance claims per policy per year than for personal insurance claims, if only due to the greater number of miles driven.

    34. Re:Disruptive technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well in the past they used to call this sort of stuff illegal. But I guess disruptive can serve as a synonym.

    35. Re:Disruptive technology by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Some professions have a closed number. Think doctors or notaries for instance. Do you find that anticompetitive ?

      Yes, of course. How could it possibly be interpreted as anything other than that? This particular form of disrupting competition is actually one of the most ancient ones, it's what medieval trade guilds did.

    36. Re:Disruptive technology by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Too many taxis and you end up with each taxi not making enough for a living.

      So? That means that some people will drop out of business, and the number goes back down. What more, since different taxis operate differently, and some are more efficient than others, the ones that are less efficient and hence less profitable will drop out first, so the competition works to keep the strongest players in the game, while also keeping the prices as low as they can get - which is in the direct interest of the customers. That's exactly how it is supposed to work in a free market. There are cases when free markets don't work, but I don't see why they wouldn't here.

    37. Re:Disruptive technology by Issarlk · · Score: 1

      The only disruptive technology here is not having to take a 270000$ loan to be able to do taxi work.

    38. Re:Disruptive technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe a number of them if not a majority are Union represented. And based on the Unions control of politicians, and the "New Deal" passed after the great depression, which gave Unions unyielding powers. I'm not surprised in the US at least the Unions are trying to do everything to kill of Uber and and the like.

      And I guessing Unions in other countries have followed the same defunct path as US based unions, again not surprising to see this going on in Europe.

    39. Re:Disruptive technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Again, what happens in the US is irrelevant.

      What the taxi drivers did in London was perfectly acceptable, legal, and even approved by the police (for a limited period.)

      Which is similar in most of Europe, thankfully. It makes for an active democracy, where the people can become engaged, show disagreement with current politics or corporate powers and actually drive change. Not only bow to whatever is happening. The lack of influence and engagement the American people have on politics and corporate powers in comparison is scary.

    40. Re:Disruptive technology by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      ...you're allowed to cut a picket line, and they have to let you through. In some cases, the protesters refused to move, while a wage-worker who depended on the income from actually working their job wanted to pass

      Those commie Union workers don't work for a wage? Just copies of Das Kapital and good will?

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    41. Re:Disruptive technology by sFurbo · · Score: 1

      What is the difference between demonstrating and picketing? That the intended effect of a demonstration is to spread information, while the intended effect of picketing is to annoy? That picketing takes place at the thing that is being complained about? Or something else?

    42. Re:Disruptive technology by sFurbo · · Score: 1

      That equilibrium may be at the poverty level, which wouldn't be good for drivers.

      If there are other, more well paid jobs to have, it wont be, as taxi drivers will chose other occupations. If there aren't, that is a much larger problem than the amount of taxis.

      It may be at the level where streets are clogged with taxis, which wouldn't be good for other road users.

      A taxi is not much more road space consuming per traveler than having a private car. If the equilibrium amount of taxis is where the roads are clogged, road pricing (or even tax on cars or fuel) is a better system to reduce clogging than restricting the number of taxis.

      It may be at a level where it's impossible to get a taxi to certain locations or times of day (The famous "I don't go south of the River".)

      If there customers paying enough to get south of the river, it wont be. If there isn't, restricting the amount of taxis is only going to make the problem worse.
      In fact, that last one sounds like a problem introduced by an artificial limit on the number of taxis. Do you have any examples of it in cities where this is not the case?

    43. Re:Disruptive technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too many taxis and you end up with each taxi not making enough for a living.
      There has to be an equilibrium somewhere.

      Equilibrium, exactly! If there are too many taxis, and no drivers are making a living, then some will quit. Thus, there will be fewer taxis.

    44. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      If there are other, more well paid jobs to have, it wont be, as taxi drivers will chose other occupations.

      Real people don't behave like numbers in an economics text-book. This is easy to see as economists are wrong as often as they are right when they try to predict a future trend.

      Take the acting profession in the UK. A poll was recently done of people who consider themselves professional actors - to the extent that they spend UKP 150 on a professional casting website.

      The average wage in the UK is UKP 26,500 per annum. Poverty level for a single person with no dependants is said to be below UKP 6600.

      Only 2% of actors were earning UKP 20,000 or more.
      75% were earning less than £5000.

      A taxi is not much more road space consuming per traveler than having a private car.

      Sure, and if well balanced, it's better to have taxis in use than cars parked. But the point is that your equilibrium may not be at the point that's well balanced for this. And taxis running round without passengers are extra vehicles on the road.

      My point remains beyond dispute. The equilibrium that is reached naturally is not logically connected to any of the levels that are actually good for the various different people affected.

      Water "finds it's own level". But that level may be a flood or a drought. Most of the time we don't have a problem with water's level. But that's because we have adapted to what water conditions normally are, avoiding desert and (mostly) avoiding flood plain Why should we have to adapt to the natural level of taxis, rather than manage the level to suit us?

    45. Re:Disruptive technology by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Union workers work for a wage, and are expected to forgo wages while protesting. People try to cut the picket line to work anyway, which is frowned upon by the protesters; the point is it's illegal to prevent them from doing so. Restraint of a person from a legal act is considered not peaceful.

    46. Re:Disruptive technology by sFurbo · · Score: 1

      Real people don't behave like numbers in an economics text-book. This is easy to see as economists are wrong as often as they are right when they try to predict a future trend.
      Take the acting profession in the UK. A poll was recently done of people who consider themselves professional actors - to the extent that they spend UKP 150 on a professional casting website.
      The average wage in the UK is UKP 26,500 per annum. Poverty level for a single person with no dependants is said to be below UKP 6600.
      Only 2% of actors were earning UKP 20,000 or more.
      75% were earning less than £5000.

      I don't think that example shows economists being wrong, it just shows people putting value in being an actor, enough to offset the (extremely) low wage. It does show me being wrong - I had not accounted for that possibility. But do you want to prohibit most of these people from being actors in order to increase the wage of the rest? If you don't, then why would you want it for taxis? If you do, I can only say that I disagree, that I think people should be allowed to choose a untraditional life if that makes them happy, but I have no arguments save that.

      Why should we have to adapt to the natural level of taxis, rather than manage the level to suit us?

      Because the natural level is a Pareto efficient state, which is something we should strive for from a resource allocation point of view. And because it follows from accepting that people are autonomous agents, and have the most knowledge about their own lifes, which is something we should strive for from an ethical point of view.

    47. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Because the natural level is a Pareto efficient state,

      No it's not. Consider the tragedy of the commons. It proves beyond doubt that the natural exploitation of a resource is not the one that is optimally best for most people.

      And I'm suggesting that supplying a city with taxis is certainly one that could be a tragedy of the commons.

      And because it follows from accepting that people are autonomous agents, and have the most knowledge about their own lifes, which is something we should strive for from an ethical point of view.

      No man is an island. What one person does affects other people. Thinking abut what is best for society provides better outcomes than promoting everyone acting in their own self-interest. Selfishness is not ethics.

    48. Re:Disruptive technology by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      They're complaining because the system is falling apart and leaving them broke.

      Under the older system, somebody would acquire a taxi license or medallion or whatever, and have an opportunity to make money in a certain way from it. On retirement, that person could sell that license to the next person. This has been going on for a long time. People invest a lot of money in an asset that they can get a revenue stream from and then sell it. They were basing their financial future on the system continuing. They had good reason to believe it would.

      Unfortunately, the system was based on artificial scarcity, and there are other ways to get similar service nowadays. This means that the license owners are facing a very serious financial loss. They won't be able to make the same income as before, and they certainly won't be able to recoup their investment. They may have large loans that still have to be paid back, unless they declare bankruptcy. (Cabbies who lease licenses may be in a similar position, finding their income drop and the lease payments still owing.)

      So, yeah, sucks to be them. But we could extend them a little sympathy, and recognize that they are trying to avoid being financially devastated.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    49. Re:Disruptive technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He said "physically impeding the movement of any person is not peaceful protest", so no, you could be arrested for that.

    50. Re:Disruptive technology by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      All the problems you describe can be solved by the economists that you disparage and with newer technology it's really not that hard. You implement a road use fee (by mile or by time) so that the roads aren't clogged with useless or unused vehicles (e.g. taxis driving around with no passengers). You allow them to charge extra to drive people "south of the river" (and charge less to come back so taxis don't come back empty).

      This is very different and much more flexible than the crude methods of limiting the number of taxis by law or mandating that drivers MUST take you to any destination you specify. It's simply about allowing the market enough flexibility to find the right equilibrium while forcing drivers to pay for the external costs (e.g. pollution, congestion, ...) of their activity.

    51. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      I'm not promoting the particular management of limiting the number of taxis, but the general principle that roads in general and taxis in particular need standards, regulation and management. Your road fees and varying of the fee structure is just another way of doing this, and I'm not against it, so long as taxis and taxi drivers are still licensed. (The license procedure checks for things like ability to drive, insurance, a suitable vehicle, etc.)

    52. Re:Disruptive technology by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      Ability to drive, insurance and suitable vehicle are all things that every driver should have. Why add extra constraints that you wouldn't have for a pizza delivery boy or even someone with a long commute?

    53. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      In London Taxi/Private hire driver licenses include an enhanced criminal records check, higher standards on the vehicle than private vehicles, a check that the taximeter has not been tampered with (so they can't overcharge), commercial rather than private insurance, etc.

      A pizza boy doesn't have a duty of care to old or disabled people or children. They generally buzz around on scooters, and have a high accident rate. Not something anyone wants for public transport.

    54. Re:Disruptive technology by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      Why is the duty of a paid driver to care for the old, disabled or children? Their responsibility is simply to transport an individual safely from point A to point B. Any extra services are optional and a company that wants to provide those can, even charging an extra fee if that makes sense for their business model.

      Your pizza boy example shows the hypocrisy of your viewpoint. If they are so dangerous to the public then shouldn't they be equally regulated, if not more so? Why do you think it's okay for incompetent drivers to fill the streets of London as long as they don't do it with a willing passenger?

    55. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Why is the duty of a paid driver to care for the old, disabled or children? Their responsibility is simply to transport an individual safely from point A to point B.

      The bleakness of your world view is depressing. Why? It's the law. And it's the law because it's a good thing. It's also a moral duty.

      Why do you think it's okay for incompetent drivers to fill the streets of London as long as they don't do it with a willing passenger?

      I don't. Your questions are becoming child like.

    56. Re:Disruptive technology by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      The bleakness of your world view is depressing.

      Really? Your ideal world is a nanny state that prevents anyone from doing any activity the state (i.e. you) decides is not in their long term best interest. It requires laws for people to be considerate and civil to their neighbors, customers and passersby. I like my world much better, thank you.

      Why? It's the law. And it's the law because it's a good thing. It's also a moral duty.

      You have a law in London that says "Taxi drivers must take responsibility for the old and disabled. Everybody else, just ignore them?" I think your law is terrible and the time of blindly following stupid laws is long past.

      I don't. Your questions are becoming child like.

      The questions are simple, not childlike, and are necessary to point out that your philosophy is inconsistent and impossible. Where you get this romantic idea that taxi drivers are special guardians of society is beyond me, perhaps that's part of London cab lore, but it applies nowhere else in the world. In my bleak world view, taxi drivers, pizza delivery boys, fedex delivery men ALL drive safely and take on a shared responsibility for the weaker members of society just like everyone else.

    57. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      You have a law in London that says "Taxi drivers must take responsibility for the old and disabled. Everybody else, just ignore them?" I think your law is terrible and the time of blindly following stupid laws is long past. ...
      The questions are simple, not childlike

      You ask a question, then assume an answer of your own, and argue it as if that's what you have been told. That's childlike. And it makes for an uninteresting exchange.

    58. Re:Disruptive technology by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      Except you don't answer the questions, so I'm forced to figure out the answer from your evasive responses. Give a full answer that actually addresses the inconsistency I point out in your stated philosophy and I wouldn't have to take shortcuts.

      WHY are taxi/Uber drivers special? You can't or won't address that properly. If you say that it is because of X (e.g. "it's the law" or "it's their duty") then that means that X doesn't apply to the OTHER cases (e.g. pizza delivery boys et al.) This is just simple logic.

    59. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Except you don't answer the questions, so I'm forced to figure out the answer from your evasive responses.

      Don't bother to reply to this, as you'll only feel you have to make excuses for yourself. But that's simply not true. There were no unanswered questions at the point at which you started saying I have opinions that don't have. My disengagement from the discussion only happened afterwards. Because you killed it with this dishonest and boorish approach.

    60. Re:Disruptive technology by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      I suggest you review the thread and/or have someone explain the basics of logic to you. If I ask you why a dog is required to be on a leash outdoors, but not a cat and you say that it's because a dog has four legs, then I am not going out on a limb by suggesting that you think a cat does not have four legs.

    61. Re:Disruptive technology by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      You have some unique views about the job description and special duties of cab drivers that seem to put you at odds with the rest of the world. Perhaps this view is shared by most Londoners in which case companies like Uber will never be successful there. However, I expect that in twenty years when Londoners travel to other cities they will be pleasantly surprised by the cheap and convenient transportation options that are available compared to their own which have remained expensive and inefficient.

    62. Re:Disruptive technology by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      I suggest you look at the thread and stop being a cunt.

  3. So, potentially obstructing emergency services by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure that's against the law.

  4. Oh NOEEES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not a better method! Don't take my JARRRRB. Lets pass laws to keep inefficiencies in the market so I don't have to adapt! Its almost like a whole new MPAA or RIAA. Seriously people. New business models are GOOD.

    1. Re:Oh NOEEES! by praxis · · Score: 1

      Not a better method! Don't take my JARRRRB. Lets pass laws to keep inefficiencies in the market so I don't have to adapt! Its almost like a whole new MPAA or RIAA. Seriously people. New business models are GOOD.

      Either Uber plays by the current laws, or we free the current taxi companies from those same laws. Allowing one group to legally operate under different (and cheaper) laws because they are newcomers is pretty unfair. In my city, both taxis and Uber use a smartphone app to dispatch and have up-front flat rates, yet they are regulated differently and I think that sucks.

    2. Re:Oh NOEEES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not a better method! Don't take my JARRRRB. Lets pass laws to keep inefficiencies in the market so I don't have to adapt! Its almost like a whole new MPAA or RIAA. Seriously people.

      Exactly. Or for that matter, American programmers complaining about H1B competition.

      Adapt! The market WILL push towards efficiency. You have to either adapt, or get run over.

    3. Re:Oh NOEEES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or people can decide for themselves if they want to go with higher expectations and better quality or lower demands and lower quality.

  5. Good advert for Uber by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Well the protest backfired - drove more people than ever to download Uber in London

    http://order-order.com/2014/06...

    1. Re:Good advert for Uber by j-beda · · Score: 1

      Well the protest backfired - drove more people than ever to download Uber in London

      http://order-order.com/2014/06...

      "Uber is reporting an 850% increase in app downloads today"

      Oops. I thought that might happen.

  6. Wrong amount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    200 000 Euro equals = 294 000 Canadian Dollar, not 270 000.

    Oh, you meant U.S. Dollar? Then specify the fucking units.

    And by the way, stop using a comma to separate thousands. How the hell can you write arrays and coordinates if you have commas in the numbers themselves, you stupid idiots?

    1. Re:Wrong amount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't 200k a little steep for a taxi license?? No fucker in the world would have one if they were that price? Perhaps over a lifetime? Shitty write-up not clear at all!

    2. Re:Wrong amount by heezer7 · · Score: 1

      Following our typed numbers, spaces in your arrays and coordinates makes more sense?

    3. Re:Wrong amount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "How the hell can you write arrays and coordinates ..."

      Use a different delimiter? Where does it say the delimiter has to be a comma?

      200;300;212;332

      PS, most times "large numbers" are separated by someething (typically a comma) for readability. Since most of the world does this you might be better off changing yourself.

    4. Re:Wrong amount by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      It's for a medallion. Holding the medallion allows you to operate the cab, but the medallion can be bought and sold. So you might pay $200k for it, but when you're done being a cabby you can sell it to somebody else, probably at a profit.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    5. Re:Wrong amount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Internationally it's typically a space or a .

    6. Re:Wrong amount by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Jesus motherfucking CHRIST! There's an arbitrary $200,000 investment required to be a cabbie in Europe? What the hell!?

      Let me make this clear for you in case you don't understand the problem with this.
      1) Most people don't just have $200,000 lying about. Not even for business expenses. So the phrase "you might pay $200,000 for it" is straight up bullshit. No. People go get a loan to buy this and pay the intrest on the loan. Which is a fancy-dancy way of making cabbies rent the privileged of being a cabbie.

      2) For ANY sort of investment that ties up money, the phrase "you can sell it to somebody else, probably at a profit." is something you feed to suckers. It's something you say when you're trying to sell.

      3) If you can just sell the thing to anybody, without any sort of certification, testing, vouching or anything, then it serves ZERO purpose other than simply being another bar to entry. And I think that was the original intent. To impose a limit on the number of taxis clogging the streets. This system does a really shitty job of keeping up with a growing populace and shifts in traffic needs.

    7. Re:Wrong amount by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Yes. All of those things you said are true. That's the way it works in europe, and the way it works in the US, too. A medallion in New York costs upwards of a million dollars. It is solely a method of limiting the number of cabs on the streets, which is why cab companies that organized and bought into this system are really pissed off about Uber ignoring it.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    8. Re:Wrong amount by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      If you are talking in the Internet the spaces make little difference. But commas or dots in numbers are onfusing since they have opposite meanings in US vs Europe and most of the rest of the world. i.e. the US uses the ',' as the thousands separator while in Europe its the '.' that's the thousands separator and similar rules apply to the decimal separator.

    9. Re:Wrong amount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps, but as others have posted this is a US website and naturally has a "US" Bias (FWIW I am not American).

  7. Perhaps the headline would be less confusing by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If it read, "*Anti-*Uber Demonstrations Snarl Traffic..."

  8. scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    $300,000 for a license to operate a cab?!!
    Look at me, mr internet entrepreneur guy, disruptin' your business model because I'm a special fuckin' snowflake and the rules don't apply to me!

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Trepidity · · Score: 4, Interesting

      In Europe that isn't even usually the case. In Sweden, one of the countries where Uber is whining about "regulation", the taxi market is deregulated. Anyone can offer taxi services, at any price, providing they meet four basic consumer-protection requirements:

      1. They have a commercial driver's license

      2. They have commercial vehicle insurance

      3. They post their rates openly and visibly

      4. They have a functioning meter, which is inspected occasionally to ensure that it is billing the same amount as the posted rates

    2. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Nezic · · Score: 1

      You may need to hash out your post a bit.. I can't tell if you're mad at the cost of the licenses or mad at uber drivers not needing to pay it.

      Anyway, if it really costs THAT much for a taxi license then the regulators are crazy. Why aren't the protests directed at that?

    3. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Other than all these regulations I'm about to list, it's completely deregulated!

    4. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Really? Does 4 rules make your head swim? Nomadic Middle-Easterners in the distant past, praying to invisible men in the sky could deal with 10. I guess you can't expect that much out of the modern ape-man.

    5. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by rasmusbr · · Score: 1

      In Europe that isn't even usually the case. In Sweden, one of the countries where Uber is whining about "regulation", the taxi market is deregulated. Anyone can offer taxi services, at any price, providing they meet four basic consumer-protection requirements:

      1. They have a commercial driver's license

      2. They have commercial vehicle insurance

      3. They post their rates openly and visibly

      4. They have a functioning meter, which is inspected occasionally to ensure that it is billing the same amount as the posted rates

      And since the Swedish authorities have not cracked down on Uber we can probably surmise that rules 3 and 4 will get rewritten or reinterpreted to allow what Uber is doing. Uber is in compliance in spirit (if not in practice) since they do advertise their prices to anyone who has the ability to buy a ride and the driver does have a meter app on his or her phone.

      The real wrongdoing here by the Swedish authorities is that they're not (not yet) giving other companies the same pass that they're giving Uber.

    6. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is it that a socialist country like Sweden has more capitalist Taxi rules than most cities in the US?

    7. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by N1AK · · Score: 1

      As someone has already said a system with various requirements, even just those 4 isn't de-regulated. Taxi's shouldn't be de-regulated imo however the requirement to post prices and have a functioning meter are clearly outdated and stop a useful service model. An Uber user can easily see the rates and uses shared GPS tracking for metering, so those regulations stop wannabe Uber users from getting a service while doing nothing to benefit anyone else. if the rules were amended to say that drivers must be aware of pricing before entering the vehicle (allowing web booking) then it makes everyone happy.

    8. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Zironic · · Score: 1

      Sweden is not giving Uber a pass. Swedish law currently requires a meter except in particularly unique circumstances such as visiting heads of state. Uber applied for exception and got denied.

    9. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For being Sweden, that is as close as completely free and deregulated (close to anarchy actually) as it ever gets.

    10. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Those 4 rules are called regulations. They were just pointing out your nonsense wording.

    11. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      In economics, a "deregulated" market does not mean "anarchy with no laws". It's a specific term meaning taking a market that traditionally has government-fixed prices and monopoly operators, and opening it up to a market that any entrant willing to meet some basic requirements can compete in.

      For example, when Texas deregulated its electricity-supply market, this meant that the former utility-pricing model was replaced by a market model, in which consumers shop around and sign contracts with power-plant operators, who can choose to differentiate themselves on various grounds (price, customer service, "greenness", etc.). It does not mean that Texas has abolished all laws relating to power-generation: a "deregulated" electricity market does not mean that you no longer have to follow engineering standards or safety regulations.

    12. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      Sweden is pretty capitalist really, in the sense of being very big on using markets as mechanisms. They're just capitalists who also have a strong social safety net (aka welfare state).

      Another transportation-related segment where they are more market-oriented than in the U.S. is in public transit. They have a large public transit system paid for by taxes. But, it is operated by private contractors, through an open bidding process. As a result, unlike in most American cities, Swedish bus and train drivers are not government employees.

    13. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Can you really deny the hilarity of your post? It only said two things - it's deregulated. Here are the regulations.

      We're not all in the field of Economics, but yes, I do know what deregulated means. Even If you were speaking only to economists, that irony wouldn't go unnoticed.

    14. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that really stung me in Sweden where I got into a taxi that was deliberately made to look like one of the bigger companies but had massively higher rates. I was charged about 600 SEK for a 5km drive. The lady at the hotel was furious at that price and tried to call the taxi to abuse him. Even had the receipt...

      Uber would have been a blessing for me

    15. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      This is a good example of how regulations can stifle the market and have unintended consequences. They all seem like reasonable regulations, but #3 and #4 make unnecessary assumptions about the way taxis work. The spirit of this regulation seems to be to make sure that customers are informed about how much they will need to pay before being obligated to pay it. Uber absolutely follows the spirit of this law, I would argue, even better than traditional taxis. You pay up front because with Uber it can calculate how far the journey will be before actually driving it. This eliminates the need to post rates and to have a meter.

      But you are not allowed to follow the spirit of the law. You must follow the letter of the law. The letter of the law would require Uber to follow regulations designed for traditional taxis that for Uber just create unnecessary expenses that then drive up costs for consumers. Many regulations are necessary and work well. It is important to recognize when they become obsolete and to update or remove them. Many times it's better to have fewer regulations if possible, because it makes maintaining them easier and more cost efficient, and therefore more likely.

      In many cases when regulations become too complicated, there is a temptation by both citizens and legislators to simply avoid the problems rather than fixing them (e.g. like allowing your garden to become overgrown). By keeping your garden small and manageable, it is more likely that people will be able and willing to keep it maintained.

      It sounds like the swedish taxi regulation garden is certainly small enough to manage. So all that is left is to update a few rules for the 21st century. Good job Sweden!

    16. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      Uber works on a fixed price model: I'll give you a ride from X to Y for this amount.

      You'd think they could work out something with the government about meters in a case where meters are totally irrelevant.

    17. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Zironic · · Score: 1

      Uber are allowed to run fixed price runs without a meter (For instance the Airport to City and vice versa is a common one) however Uber also runs normal per minute/km prices which require a meter.

      In theory their GPS app could get recognised as a meter as long as Uber can prove it won't lie to the goverment.

    18. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by io+bus · · Score: 1

      I think this makes sense. That way i feel at least quiet safe and can have trust. Well... But i am not a taxi rider most of the time but i am not sure if uber or any other enterprise is better than a regular taxi. Regulation do make sense and i think consumer should be protected so they don't end up with trouble over money or other issues.

    19. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's try the inverse ...

      1. Uber drivers are *not* required to have commercial driver's license
      2. Uber drivers are *not* required to have commercial vehicle insurance.
      3. Uber drivers are *not* required to post their rates (after all, they're in the Uber app)
      4. Uber drivers are *not* required to have a functioning meter (after all, it's in the Uber app).

      Feel safer now ?

    20. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you really deny the hilarity of your post? It only said two things - it's deregulated. Here are the regulations.

      We're not all in the field of Economics, but yes, I do know what deregulated means. Even If you were speaking only to economists, that irony wouldn't go unnoticed.

      I'm no economist but saw no irony and thought the first reply was trying to nitpick a non-existent point. If you have any knowledge of the types of questions we are discussing here, understanding that deregulated market is not necessarily the same as anarchy is sort of a given.

    21. Re:scabs suck. next you'll skip paying bribes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is only true if you going to pick people up on the street.

      For prepaid, flat-rate runs, like to one Über is offering only 1&2 applies.

      3&4 is what the taxi companies want to force onto Über...

  9. If not this... by suman28 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Something new (i.e driverless Google cars) will come along to threaten their livelyhood. Wouldn't today be the best time to start evaluating a different way to earn a living? How many ways can you possibly protest and keep innovation away from people's daily lives?

    1. Re:If not this... by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

      Start saving for your Johnny Cab franchise today!

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
    2. Re:If not this... by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

      Sell that medallion now, save the money for a Johnny Cab franchise!

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
    3. Re:If not this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ^^^ That right there. The age of the cabby is coming to an end. It may be a few years yet, but developments like this should be taken as a clear sign that it's time to hone some new skill-sets.

    4. Re:If not this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly the point I was going to make. Look, cabbies of the world, sorry to break it to you, but you're circling the drain. For a while, truckers will be quite happy riding along in robotic trucks, but their smiles will fade as fully automatic trucks begin to take root. "This is merely the beginning!"

  10. Fighting over horse whip monopoly by sinij · · Score: 1

    Cab drivers are almost thing of the past. Moment automated cars show up there won't be such thing anymore.

  11. 200,000 Euros? by jfbilodeau · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Maybe the problem is not with Uber, but with the cost of being licensed. Is ~200,000 Euros really justified?

    --
    Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
    1. Re:200,000 Euros? by zapatero · · Score: 1

      The license and gov't regulation really is the issue of the "fairness" here. The Taxi industry is highly regulated and licensed, in Europe & the U.S... Taxis & Limos that enter an airport area are highly monitored, and regularly fined if it's found by the monitoring police that the vehicle lacks a current license.

      Uber side steps all of this gov't regulation, and, say what you will about that regulation, it is unfair to those drivers who are paying the governments the right to pickup and drop-off passengers at the airport. Of course those licensed taxi and limo drivers would be pissed.

      One way to make it fair is to drop all the licensing requirements of the taxi drivers.

    2. Re:200,000 Euros? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is specific to Paris I think. read this for a breakdown of the situation in Paris http://www.rudebaguette.com/2013/08/07/anatomy-of-the-paris-taxi-market-past-present-future/

    3. Re:200,000 Euros? by Firethorn · · Score: 3, Informative

      Maybe the problem is not with Uber, but with the cost of being licensed. Is ~200,000 Euros really justified?

      200k EU is cheap compared to NYC's $1M medallians.

      It's blatently anti-competitive.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    4. Re:200,000 Euros? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It is basically a formalized "legitimate" bribe to prevent more competition. The cab companies probably pushed the government to raise their own license fees, impose more and more regulations and limit the number of licenses. The equivalent has happened in many industries where corporations push and push for more and more regulations in order to block competition. Then they complain about all the regulation, but it is only for show since what they really want to say is look at how hard it is to do business only we have all the lawyers and capital and "skills" to do it so competitors need not even try to enter the market.

    5. Re:200,000 Euros? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the problem is not with Uber, but with the cost of being licensed. Is ~200,000 Euros really justified?

      I don't know what things are like in the USA, perhaps every Tom Dick and Harry in the USA can put a sign on the roof and call himself a taxi driver. Here in Europe Taxi driving is regulated profession which IMHO it should be since I woudn't want incompetent drivers driving people around in unsafe cars. Unfortunately, in some places, regulating the Taxi business has mutated into a well protected monopoly adminsitrated by a narrow clique of people. Taxi driving has in these places become a guaranteed job for life where you can charge what you want and not what healthy competiton forces you to charge. It's no small wonder that when a newcomer like Uber comes along and threatens these comfortable monopolistic cliques that they feel with pesky 'technology' that they will go apeshit. I don't particularly like Uber, largely because of who their backers are, but services like Uber are an inevetability and no amount of protest is eventuallly going to change that. Banning them will only work until somebody takes the ban to court and gets it invalidated, either in the supreme court or at an EU level court. In the end any problems with regulating the likes of Uber are solvable. What the taxi industry should be doing is set up it's own Uber-like service or join one (or more) thrid party ones and just compete otherwise they will end up like the record companies who spent so much time fighting the inevitability of music downloads that they woke up one moring to find themselves dealing with iTunes, Amazon and Co. who unlike the record companies had woken up early and had caught the bus in time.

    6. Re:200,000 Euros? by dkman · · Score: 1

      I agree. That's the point that needs to be looked at.

      Also, the idea is that uber drivers do it "once in a while". If someone is using uber to make a little extra money on the side, no big deal. But it someone is using uber to operate his taxi business 40 hours a week, that's a problem.

      So perhaps it should be that you need a license if you're taxiing folks more than 4 hours a week.
      Or maybe offer some sub-taxi license for those operating less than 10 hours a week that costs 100 euros.

      I'm just pulling the numbers out of my butt, but some happy medium should be possible. Of course current taxi drivers won't be happy no matter what because of the "new technology challenges my existence" problem the *AA mafia are still struggling with.

      --
      I refuse to sign
    7. Re:200,000 Euros? by dj245 · · Score: 1

      Maybe the problem is not with Uber, but with the cost of being licensed. Is ~200,000 Euros really justified?

      200k EU is cheap compared to NYC's $1M medallians.

      It's blatently anti-competitive.

      No, it is the essence of competition. Every market has rules. The city limits the number of licenses in order to keep the number of taxis reasonable. Many cities also regulate the rates. These are the "rules" of the market. The fact that medallions trade for that much indicates that taxis are still profitable and new players are willing to pay that much for a medallion in order to enter the market. Medallions, in general, are fully transferrable and can be freely sold or traded. New ones are auctioned off periodically. If the market was anticompetitive, the major players would collude and not bid against each other, resulting in lower medallion costs. The fact that people can and do pay that much for one indicates that there is enough competition.

      --
      Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
    8. Re:200,000 Euros? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course it's blatantly anti-competitive, that's the point. Roads in mega-cities like NY are ripe for tragedy of the commons failures and so their commercial use has to be very strictly regulated.

    9. Re:200,000 Euros? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Paris France the license is given for free by autorities, but the numbers of licenses are limited (15000 in 2k, around 18000 now). So if you ask for a license you have to wait 15 years before getting one.
      People retiring should give back their license to autorities but there is a loophole that allow them to sell it to people that don't want to wait and it became current pratice and every taxi driver expect to sell back his license.
      The price got up, the taxis unions don't want the government to give more license because it will disavantage drivers who paid their license expecting to sell it back when they retire (it acts as some kind of pension for them).
      So as a fact taxi regulation in France is jammed.

    10. Re:200,000 Euros? by king+neckbeard · · Score: 1
      You can argue that these rules are necessary, but don't embarrass yourself by calling it competition.

      The fact that people can and do pay that much for one indicates that there is enough competition.

      No, it indicates a large disparity in supply and demand. There are lots of potential cabbies that want a medallion, but only a small number of medallions available.

      --
      This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    11. Re:200,000 Euros? by Firethorn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The fact that medallions trade for that much indicates that taxis are still profitable and new players are willing to pay that much for a medallion in order to enter the market.

      However the medallian trade helps ensure that established players remain established and profitable. Ergo anti-competitive.

      My company has a HUGE advantage if it bought the first 1k or so medallions when they were first issues for $10 or so and has kept them ever since.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    12. Re:200,000 Euros? by mirix · · Score: 1

      Then they should revoke them every few years and have a lottery for who gets a new one.

      of course companies will be massively butthurt by that, though.

      --
      Sent from my PDP-11
    13. Re:200,000 Euros? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, what's really unfair is paying 200k euros.

    14. Re:200,000 Euros? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      If this is true then the solution is to petition the government to change the rules. However Uber and other faux-taxi companies are not doing this and are instead blatantly breaking the rules and claiming it is all ok because the business model is a bit different.

    15. Re:200,000 Euros? by aberglas · · Score: 1

      Here in Australia (and I think the UK) a taxi driver license is cheap. But you also need a taxi CAR license costs several hundred thousand dollars. Nobody wealthy enough to own a taxi license actually drives a taxi. So taxi drivers are dirt poor, usually Indians on dubious visas. But the taxi owners love their right to tax fairs. Currently about 55% of a fair goes to the owner.

      Uber is great if it breaks up that nonsense.

    16. Re:200,000 Euros? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Well, Uber is based in San Francisco, a city where every driver is already incompetent and driving around in unsafe cars, whether they're taxis or uber freelancers or residents.

      Many taxi companies already have uber like services; they have phone apps you can use (the main thing most fans are gushing about). What they don't do however is undercut the competition by hiring incompetent drivers, or have drivers who refuse to pick up passengers who give out bad ratings on the phone apps.

    17. Re:200,000 Euros? by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      If taxi companies had a quality app with the same features as Uber and the same level of skill and professionalism as the typical Uber driver thus providing the overall Uber experience then Uber would never have been created. They didn't do that and now they're playing catch up, but it's probably too late for most of them.

    18. Re:200,000 Euros? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      What exactly is a "reasonable number" of taxis, and why does natural competition not sort that out, requiring some outside regulation?

    19. Re:200,000 Euros? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that many complaints are that these new car-hirel drivers are not necessarily very skilled and some are being very unprofessional (such as refusing to pick up drivers if they have a history of giving negative reviews). I don't know if this is true for uber though. I see no evidence at all that uber drivers are more carefully screened than limousine drivers are, and passenger created ratings are as useless as yelp reviews.

  12. f*ck über by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    F uber and their wannabe taxi service. They claim to have a nice idea, sure it might work in places where there is no established and well covered taxi service in place but when compared to real taxi services like London cabs, it pales in comparison.

    No joerandom with gps can navigate complex streets like the real cabbies.

    I understand the need for this kind of service in countries like Sweden where taxis are allowed to charge $1000 for 20min drive as long as they list the prices on the car windows clearly.

    Go and run your business in such places and stop shoving your shit to the rest of us, we'll call you if we want it.

    1. Re:f*ck über by lhaeh · · Score: 1

      Why not give the people the choice? If über is so bad, peopel won't use it.

      I'd much rather spend a bit more time in traffic then spend a bunch more money.

    2. Re:f*ck über by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give the people choice? Oh no, you are a terrorist!

  13. Unfair Competition Sucks by globaljustin · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Competition sucks. Gotta keep that privileged access to the market.

    Uber is a taxi service that uses a different words to describe itself and phone apps instead of a radio dispatch

    Uber is a taxi service that gets to bypass all the rules for taxi services.

    Uber gets to do this b/c of hype, idiots like you, and bribery.

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

      Competition sucks. Gotta keep that privileged access to the market.

      Uber is a taxi service that uses a different words to describe itself and phone apps instead of a radio dispatch

      Uber is a taxi service that gets to bypass all the rules for taxi services.

      Uber gets to do this b/c of hype, idiots like you, and bribery.

      And it is the way it will be. Reality sucks for some.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    2. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used to live in the UK; there was already a two tiered system where black cabs could take a fare hailed on the street, but minicabs (cheaper, less regulated I guess) you had to call & they would come pick you up. Which, now that everyone has a phone, and with apps, is even easier than waiting for a black cab.

    3. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Then do away with the rules concerning taxi services. Very obviously the customer doesn't want them to exist, and he is the one these rules should protect.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    4. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Uber is a taxi service that uses a different words to describe itself and phone apps instead of a radio dispatch

      As far as London is concerned, Uber is a Private Hire service, not a Taxi service. Private hire services have always operated via requests made by customers via the phone or in person at their office. These instructions are then radioed as offers or orders to the Private hire drivers. Which is exactly the business model that Uber follows.

      The phone ordering, and the offers/orders to drivers may be done via TCP/IP rather than voice, but that doesn't change the model. Uber ARE obeying the rules.

      Black Cab taxis on the other hand are allowed to respond to hails on the street, and pick op at Taxi stands. Those are their advantages, and the reason they get away with charging more.

      The Black cabs are angry because Uber are competing more efficiently, such that their unique advantages count for less.

      The Black cabs are framing their complaint in terms of a third issue. Black Cabs uniquely use taximeters - the machines that work out the fare, given distance and time, and display it to users. Private Hire cars make their own arrangements with their customers. Either an agreed price before the trip, or something based on the odometer reading. The Black cabs claim that the Uber app is a taximeter. The licensing body agree with Uber that it isn't.

      It sounds like there are some cities in America where Uber aren't playing by the rules. But that's not true of London, and probably not for the other European cities that have had demos today either.

    5. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      The customer DOES want taxis and private hire cars regulated. They want to know that the car is safe, that the driver is qualified and not banned, and hopefully isn't a convicted criminal, that they are covered by insurance, and that they aren't ripped off by the fare.

      However that isn't a bar to Uber in Britain who adhere to all the regulations.

    6. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      Uber gets to do this b/c of hype, idiots like you, and bribery.

      Uber gets to do this b/c of better service and drastically lower prices.

    7. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by Pax681 · · Score: 1

      Black Cabs uniquely use taximeters - the machines that work out the fare, given distance and time, and display it to users. Private Hire cars make their own arrangements with their customers

      NOT TRUE!! !Both private hire and black cabs have metres in Scotland. Black cab rates are a bit higher but both CERTAINLY have metres mandated by law.

    8. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      How did you manage to miss the fact that I twice pointed out I was talking about London. I wrote it in the first sentence and the last.

      Manchester, where Uber also operates have taximeters in private hire vehicles. But London does not.

    9. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      As a customer, I would take an exception to that. It is true that I:

      "want to know that the car is safe, that the driver is qualified and not banned, and hopefully isn't a convicted criminal, that they are covered by insurance, and that they aren't ripped off by the fare"

      but I don't insist that all taxis in the city comply. What I want is a way to tell whether a particular taxi service is or is not fitting the bill. In other words, some kind of certification that they can pass if they want, and proudly stick a recognizable label indicating as much, that is forbidden for anyone else to use - and entered into the roster of certified taxi services where I can look them up when I'm ordering a cab.

      On the other hand, if John Doe next door thinks that he doesn't really need some or all of this is he gets a cheap ride, I don't see why it should be any of my business to tell him that he can't have it.

    10. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, if John Doe next door thinks that he doesn't really need some or all of this is he gets a cheap ride, I don't see why it should be any of my business to tell him that he can't have it.

      And your (perhaps hypothetical) teenage daughter?You're OK that she chooses the cheap option and is driven by a ex-con rapist with no insurance and a car with defective brakes?

      Sorry, but your suggestion is silly. I believe you when you say you want this, but most people don't. They want decent standards upheld without the responsibility for having to monitor it put upon themselves.

    11. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      And your (perhaps hypothetical) teenage daughter?You're OK that she chooses the cheap option and is driven by a ex-con rapist with no insurance and a car with defective brakes?

      I wouldn't be okay with that, which is why I'd raise her appropriately. I mean, it didn't occur to me to choose such an option, and it wouldn't have occurred to me when I was a teen, either, so I know this is doable.

      Sorry, but your suggestion is silly. I believe you when you say you want this, but most people don't. They want decent standards upheld without the responsibility for having to monitor it put upon themselves.

      The key words here are "without the responsibility". That is exactly the problem. If you dodge your responsibility, it doesn't go away - it just gets delegated elsewhere. In this case, it gets delegated to some small committee somewhere, with little practical oversight, and the end result is $1M for a taxi license in NYC (and do you think that the process of distributing those licenses does in any way encourage the best drivers to get them?).

      As a side note, one kind of regulation that I'd be okay with is mandatory notice when service does not comply with the standards. So you either get certified and get the badge of approval that you can proudly display, or you do not get certified, and have to place a certain note to that effect, of legally mandated size, design and prominence. I do believe in right of people to be informed about their choices, and I'm perfectly fine with state enforcement of that right ("Smoking kills" campaign is another good example). But once fully informed, they have to take responsibility for the choices that they make.

    12. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't be okay with that, which is why I'd raise her appropriately. I mean, it didn't occur to me to choose such an option, and it wouldn't have occurred to me when I was a teen, either, so I know this is doable.

      So you're advocating a downgrade in standards for other people, that you don't care about. But not for your nearest and dearest. So who is your idea supposed to serve again?

      The key words here are "without the responsibility". That is exactly the problem. If you dodge your responsibility, it doesn't go away - it just gets delegated elsewhere.

      Absolutely. And it simply is not possible to take personal responsibility for investigating the safety of every single product and service you use. There isn't time, even if you devoted every minute of every day of your life to the task. Even if is was possible, there's nothing noble to being forced into doing so because there are no standards and regulations.

      It's one of the glaring holes in the whole libertarian philosophy.

      We have governments settling and enforcing standards because that is the most rational thing to do. Have a department who have the knowledge, time and powers to investigate and enforce standards on products and services for us.

      the end result is $1M for a taxi license in NYC

      People pay that for the same reason they buy a house for $1M. They get to use it for a number of years, then expect to sell it for even more than $1M.

      I don't know NY personally, but do you see any shortage of Taxis? In the live TV shots I've seen, it doesn't look like it. All of them regulated. Who gains from them not being regulated, by a proportion being unsafe vehicles with inappropriate drivers? Nobody.

      It's a stupid idea from the libertarian loons.

    13. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. And it simply is not possible to take personal responsibility for investigating the safety of every single product and service you use. There isn't time, even if you devoted every minute of every day of your life to the task. Even if is was possible, there's nothing noble to being forced into doing so because there are no standards and regulations.

      That's precisely why I'm not suggesting that. Let the government investigate the safety of that product, and give you a report condensed down to "it's good" or "it's not" - and require the service provider to prominently state the group to which it belongs. For most people, that's good enough. For a few, they might want to go and look up the definition of "good". Some of that later group might decide that they don't like that standard, and apply their own. But what I object to is the notion that I am forced to use only something that's branded "good" by someone else.

      This is not a libertarian approach. A libertarian would tell you that you need to do the research yourself. I'm telling you that you need to make the choice yourself, once you know the result of the research.

      I don't know NY personally, but do you see any shortage of Taxis? In the live TV shots I've seen, it doesn't look like it. All of them regulated.

      It's not about the shortage of taxis. But the cost of that $1M medallion is factored into the price of service. There's no reason for it to be.

      Who gains from them not being regulated, by a proportion being unsafe vehicles with inappropriate drivers? Nobody.

      The same argument can be applied to any kind of regulation. This is basically the argument for a benevolent dictator who can run everyone's lives perfectly. The problem with it is that the regulators are not perfect, and tend to be come corrupt, the more power you put into their hands (or, alternatively, that corrupt people are attracted to positions of power - the end result is the same).

      Regulation may be necessary at times, but at all times we should use the minimum extent required to achieve the goal. If the goal is safety of customers, then certification to safety standards and a requirement for service providers to clearly and unambiguously declare whether they're so certified or not is sufficient.

    14. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      That's precisely why I'm not suggesting that. Let the government investigate the safety of that product, and give you a report condensed down to "it's good" or "it's not" - and require the service provider to prominently state the group to which it belongs. For most people, that's good enough. For a few, they might want to go and look up the definition of "good". Some of that later group might decide that they don't like that standard, and apply their own. But what I object to is the notion that I am forced to use only something that's branded "good" by someone else.

      So when bread is padded out with chalk, and pizzas are being served with rat droppings, they are lacking the seal of approval, but still sell to the poor or uninformed, who is being served by that? In what way have you made the world a better place?

      You haven't. You've gone back about a century and a half. You've regressed to a less civilised time.

    15. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      So when bread is padded out with chalk, and pizzas are being served with rat droppings, they are lacking the seal of approval, but still sell to the poor or uninformed, who is being served by that?

      Those who are willing to buy them.

      You're basically trying to cash in on guilt here. It won't work, because there's no excuse to be uninformed when the seller is required to clearly and unambiguously inform you by law, and does so. For example, I have no compassion or pity for people who keep buying cigarettes with "SMOKING KILLS" written in huge lettering on them, and then complain that they didn't know that it would have a negative effect on their health once they do get cancer. If they are truly incapable of processing that simple a message, they should be pronounced mentally incompetent, and the appropriate medical institution should take guardianship over them and ensure that they don't harm themselves by buying cigarettes or sticking fingers into meat grinders. If they are capable of processing it but unwilling to act on it, then that is their choice, and the consequences of that choice are theirs to live with. In any case, I don't see why further universal limitations on freedom of all other people should be placed for the sake of those individuals.

      As for the "poor" line, the proper response to that is that the society should act to solve poverty in general. In a hypothetical situation of "poor eating pizza with rat droppings because they can't afford the proper one", the problem is the existence of poor people, not the existence of pizza with rat droppings. If you take away pizza with rat droppings, the other kind will still remain just as inaccessible. On the other hand, if the poor are no longer poor, they are no longer compelled to choose the cheaper option (unless they happen to like the taste of rat droppings). The way you do it is by taxing economic rent (such as capital gains) higher, and redistributing it through negative income tax and/or universal basic income guarantee.

    16. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Those who are willing to buy them.

      But they are not. Brad with chalk in and pizzas with rat droppings in are not good for anyone. Your underlying assumption that if people buy them then they are best for them isn't true.

      For example, I have no compassion or pity for people who keep buying cigarettes with "SMOKING KILLS" written in huge lettering on them, and then complain that they didn't know that it would have a negative effect on their health once they do get cancer.

      Even better. You can't argue that smoking is good for anyone. Regardless of if they choose to smoke.

      You are raising individual's choice to the one true value. As if people's choice wasn't largely dictated by externals such as advertising or availability, and subconscious animal urges.

      I'm glad you have dealt with the poverty issue. But until your wish for that to be eradicated has been fulfilled, your desire for no regulation is a retrograde step.

      (It's a retrograde step even if there is no poverty. But we're certainly not going to get to agreement on that.)

    17. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I just don't believe that I can reasonably know what's best for everyone else. What I can do is figure out what's best for myself. And it annoys me when other people then come in and tell me that what I think is wrong, and they know better, and therefore marijuana should be illegal, and we're going to ban large sodas, and cheese shall not be aged on wooden boards etc.

      So yes. I am raising individual informed choice to one true value. To the extent that it is necessary to make an informed choice, I'm okay with regulation that enforces that (mandatory warnings, truth in advertising, social ads etc). But unless my choice has direct negative effects on other people, that's where regulatory power should stop.

      So yes, I suppose we'll just have to disagree on that.

    18. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      You have a fundamental difference with Basil that will never be resolved, this is crystal clear when he says that smoking is never good for anyone. His philosophy is not only impractical, but hypocritical as almost everyone who espouses such a view takes part in some activity that is not for his own long term best interest or that of society.

      However, what you have to acknowledge is the external costs imposed by individual actions. If individuals truly had informed consent and took responsibility for their actions then there would be no issue. But they don't. Take the so called ban on large sodas, for example. It is an imperfect solution, but a reasonable one. If someone really wants 64oz of soda they can still buy two 32oz sodas, it is just slightly more expensive. More importantly it adjusts their behavior to a typically more healthy and sane direction, one that won't cause them long term health costs (which are often subsidized by the rest of us who make better choices).

      Likewise, I'd be totally okay with someone who opted out of wearing a seatbelt if they guaranteed the costs of their medical care and were okay with us leaving them dying by the side of the road if their coverage wasn't good enough. Until we're willing to make those hard choices (i.e. never) we do have to put in some limits, simply as a practical alternative.

    19. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Likewise, I'd be totally okay with someone who opted out of wearing a seatbelt if they guaranteed the costs of their medical care and were okay with us leaving them dying by the side of the road if their coverage wasn't good enough.

      We don't deny treatment to people with no coverage today, we just make them pay the entire bill (or however much they can of it). I'm perfectly fine with that approach. I'm generally in favor of public healthcare, but I'm okay with it coming with strings attached - i.e. if you don't do X (even after we repeatedly tell you to do X), then you are not covered for Y. Optional private insurance plans can cover people who want to not do X, with higher premiums to cover higher costs.

      The other option is to tax. For example, if higher consumption of soda can directly lead to increased healthcare expenses, then tax the 64oz drink higher than the 32oz one, and use that tax to pay for the increase. Ditto for cigarettes, alcohol, and drugs that have known negative health effects.

      Prohibiting something should be the absolute last resort. So long as the effects on others are purely monetary, it's better to charge them directly or via taxation than to ban it altogether.

    20. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      We don't deny them treatment even IF they can't cover their fair share of the bill, which is why seat belt laws are a practical necessity. I'm okay with people making (what I believe are) poor choices, but I generally don't want to pay for it.

      Banning large soda sizes is basically equivalent to a tax. There is no suggestion for a law that says someone can't buy two 32oz sodas if they really want them, but it will almost certainly be more than the current price of 64oz. The ban is a simple psychological trick merely to counter the psychological trick vendors make by offering you a huge discount on the much larger size you don't need and often don't even want. The same could be done for cigarettes or marijuana, e.g. requiring stores to sell individual packs and not offering bulk discounts.

    21. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Banning large soda sizes is basically equivalent to a tax.

      Not really, since the extra profit the seller makes on selling them in two smaller containers is pocketed by the seller. With a tax, you would actually use it to offset the increased public costs. That's what makes it okay - it's not just trying to subtly manipulate behavior, it's simply exposing the hidden costs.

    22. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      You're right on that. Banning is only equivalent as a deterrent, but it doesn't have the extra benefit of mitigating the external costs that would otherwise be passed on to society. I prefer the taxing approach, but will settle for the "ban" where people have philosophical issues with new taxes. There is nothing wrong with government influencing behavior as long as they do it openly and with the right long term goals in mind - one of many examples is putting disgusting photos on cigarette packages.

    23. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      His philosophy is not only impractical, but hypocritical as almost everyone who espouses such a view takes part in some activity that is not for his own long term best interest or that of society.

      That's not quite full thought through and so you've been unfair. It's certainly not hypocritical if I am happy to accept the same ban (or tax or whatever) on the activity, the same as everyone else.

      For example I'm not a smoker now, but I was for many years, and tried many times to give up. I accepted the escalating punitive tax (in the UK) as a good incentive to cut down or give up. Likewise even whilst a smoker I was happy that smoking was banned in all indoor public places.

      It's a fact that smoking's not good for anyone. It's an addiction that people almost universally get into when they are young and impressionable. And so society helping to discourage it is good for everyone.

      The other poster mentions cannabis, and that's a more difficult one, as informed scientific opinion is that it's less harmful than other accepted mild drugs such as caffeine and alcohol, non-addictive and never fatal. Government bans seem based on historical prejudice rather than rationality. I obviously don't back regulation where the regulation is anti-science.

      Your point about eternal costs is a good one, and also covers regulation on the environment. Those costs are not only monetary ones.

    24. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      "who is being served by that?"
      Those who are willing to buy them.

      I couldn't disagree more.

      As for the "poor" line, the proper response to that is that the society should act to solve poverty in general.

      Yes it should. But that still doesn't mean that people are well served by harmful goods and services. Even if they buy them.

    25. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      That's not quite full thought through and so you've been unfair. It's certainly not hypocritical if I am happy to accept the same ban (or tax or whatever) on the activity, the same as everyone else.

      It's hypocritical if you don't call for a ban on every activity that is known to be "bad" for society, that you only want to ban things you personally find "bad."

      For example I'm not a smoker now, but I was for many years, and tried many times to give up. I accepted the escalating punitive tax (in the UK) as a good incentive to cut down or give up.

      That is not a fair example as that is something you wanted to give up anyway. Your philosophy would ban every recreational drug (including alcohol), non-educational TV, movies, video games and entertainment. It would ban pornography, cosmetic surgery, probably cosmetics themselves, on and on down the line. That would make you consistent and not a hypocrite.

      It's a fact that smoking's not good for anyone. It's an addiction that people almost universally get into when they are young and impressionable.

      That is absolutely not a fact. Smoking has long term negative health consequences, but it is for the individual to decide if the good they get out of smoking - the pleasure, stress relief, camaraderie, et al. outweigh those long term risks. Your philosophy does not account for the benefits from "bad" habits or activities. I smoke about twice a year and the value I get from those experiences is enormous vs. the added health risk I'm subjecting myself to. Your philosophy would prevent me from making that individual choice, simply because YOU have an addictive personality (at least to cigarettes) and I don't.

      And so society helping to discourage it is good for everyone.

      It's good for society, in general, certainly not for everyone. Discouragement is fine, within limits, as shutdown (and I) have discussed, but you are talking about absolutes. Like no smoking in "public" spaces, for example.

      The other poster mentions cannabis ...

      There is almost no doubt that cannabis has negative health effects and many short term costs, therefore by your philosophy it should be banned. If you open the door to weighing the good an individual gets vs. the long term risk (and external costs) in this case you have to allow it in all cases (see "hypocrite" above).

      Your point about eternal costs is a good one, and also covers regulation on the environment. Those costs are not only monetary ones.

      Absolutely. Those who enjoy the benefits of a "bad" habit should pay for ALL external costs.

    26. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      I'm afraid your post consists of a lot of statements about what I believe or would or have done, none of which is true. You don't know me, and therefore your post is worthless.

      Your claims on me being a hypocrite are irrational and stupid. You can't invent what my opinion is, invest your own reasons for why I should think a different thing, then call me a hypocrite because your two imaginary positions are different.

      I enjoy a good discussion. But wild flinging of straw men doesn't make for one.

    27. Re:Unfair Competition Sucks by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      The philosophy you have written down in this thread is inconsistent and hypocritical. You are correct that I have no idea what you really think, but I do know what you have actually committed to paper. You are certainly under no obligation to address those problems with what you have written, to point out the nuance in your thinking that we have overlooked, but don't begrudge me the right to point out those issues.

      You say X should be banned because Z. I say that Y is also Z. It's not a great leap for me to assume that you think Y should also be banned. If you want to point out that you really meant that X is Z' (a subtle subset of Z that does not apply to Y) then go ahead or just leave your inconsistent philosophy out there. Up to you.

  14. Horse meet car, car meet horse. by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 1

    I the UK during the early days of cars they had a law:
    Secondly, one of such persons, while any locomotive is in motion, shall precede such locomotive on foot by not less than sixty yards, and shall carry a red flag constantly displayed, and shall warn the riders and drivers of horses of the approach of such locomotives, and shall signal the driver thereof when it shall be necessary to stop, and shall assist horses, and carriages drawn by horses, passing the same,

    So basically it limited all cars to the speed of someone walking in front. Oddly enough not much of the early history of the automobile was written in the UK during that time period. What I am waiting for is a false flag operation on the part of the drivers where they pretend to be an Uber driver and then proceed to do the worst trip ever, and then post the results to Youtube. What they are forgetting is that it all boils down to a simple fact, if people didn't like Uber, then people wouldn't use Uber. But at the same time, under their proposed rules; if people don't like London cabs then too bad.

    1. Re:Horse meet car, car meet horse. by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      So basically it limited all cars to the speed of someone walking in front.

      You could go much faster than that, you just need more walkers.

  15. Uber is Pushing Clarity by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2, Informative

    Pro or Con, Uber is pushing the boundaries and bringing some clarity to the old system. Some terms for discussion:

    Rent seeking

    People are said to seek rents when they try to obtain benefits for themselves through the political arena. They typically do so by getting a subsidy for a good they produce or for being in a particular class of people, by getting a tariff on a good they produce, or by getting a special regulation that hampers their competitors. Elderly people, for example, often seek higher Social Security payments; steel producers often seek restrictions on imports of steel; and licensed electricians and doctors often lobby to keep regulations in place that restrict competition from unlicensed electricians or doctors.

    Fascism

    Where socialism sought totalitarian control of a society's economic processes through direct state operation of the means of production, fascism sought that control indirectly, through domination of nominally private owners. Where socialism nationalized property explicitly, fascism did so implicitly, by requiring owners to use their property in the "national interest" - that is, as the autocratic authority conceived it. (Nevertheless, a few industries were operated by the state.) Where socialism abolished all market relations outright, fascism left the appearance of market relations while planning all economic activities. Where socialism abolished money and prices, fascism controlled the monetary system and set all prices and wages politically. In doing all this, fascism denatured the marketplace. Entrepreneurship was abolished. State ministries, rather than consumers, determined what was produced and under what conditions.

    I find it particularly interesting that not only does Uber do background checks on its drivers and allows the rider to rate the cabbie and cab, it also allows the cabbie to rate the rider, potentially increasing safety for the cabbie in ways that the government model does not and can not. Cabbie murder is a real thing and government does not offer a solution. But it's still not surprising that the cartel members are upset that their cartel membership is losing value.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    1. Re:Uber is Pushing Clarity by DJCouchyCouch · · Score: 2

      > it also allows the cabbie to rate the rider, potentially increasing safety for the cabbie in ways that the government model does not and can not.

      Rider murdered me in the face. One star.

    2. Re:Uber is Pushing Clarity by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      Cabbie murder is a real thing and government does not offer a solution.

      Interesting that a few of those news stories linked to in Google News have to do with cabbies who HAVE murdered other people (rather than cabbies BEING MURDERED).

      It would be useful to see some stats on this, rather than just a generic link to Google News. I don't doubt that being a cabbie is a dangerous profession, but it would be good to see some details on this.

    3. Re:Uber is Pushing Clarity by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      FWIW, the definition of "fascism" you give does not describe either Fascist Italy or Nazi Germany at all well.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  16. Re:"disruptive" = scam by Ksevio · · Score: 1

    How is it a scam? I can see calling them a taxi company without proper licensing, but they're providing a service people want, not scamming them out of money.

  17. Why does MADD not support Uber? by lhaeh · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You would think MADD would support deregulation of the taxi industry. Afterall, a big reason people drink and drive is because of the high cost of cabs. It's almost as if they care more about keeping people from drinking them keeping them safe...

    1. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by praxis · · Score: 1

      People drink and drive mostly in locations where there are not alternatives to driving. I've not really seen many drunk drivers downtown as people walk to the pub. All the drunk drivers I've seen have been in the suburbs. There, taxis cost the same, but the pub is further. It appears that pub density is the problem, not taxi prices.

    2. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      During prohibition the federal government deliberately poisoned alcohol knowing people would drink it and thousands of people died as a result. Some people care more about stopping alcohol consumption than they do about people.

    3. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by Trepidity · · Score: 0

      Price-sensitivity to cabs is not actually a big reason people drink and drive.

    4. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it's condoning that people drink. Period. It's not about children or safety, it's about neo-puritanism.

    5. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      I speak for myself and all of my close friends when I say that yes, price-sensitivity to cabs is the biggest reason people drink and drive.

      If cabs were free, nobody I know would drink and drive. Not one of them. And I'm close friends with several people who have been convicted of DUI (and many more who haven't yet been caught).

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
    6. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live downtownish, and regularly drink and drive, as do many people I know, if cabs were cheap, I would have no reason to. I can take a bicycle, but that is hard moving from bar to bar, and does not work in the winter.

    7. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, I knew about denaturing but had never heard that the government used it to kill 10,000 people? And I would bet not a single person was arrested over a program that resulted in so many deaths and MANY more people who were blinded & made sick. Disturbingly it is still done today, alcohol from ethanol and other large scale production not meant for consumption is still purposely poisoned.

    8. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, you have money to "bar hop" but not cab fare?

      Should my taxes go towards your "free" taxi service?

    9. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      Price-sensitivity to cabs is not actually a big reason people drink and drive.

      [citation needed]

      In fact, people with transportation-related reasons for drinking and driving are generally low-income or even in poverty. I don't think your claim holds up.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    10. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      So, you have money to "bar hop" but not cab fare?

      No, I have money for neither, which is why I bought a two-tap kegerator for my apartment.

      Should my taxes go towards your "free" taxi service?

      $20 can get me properly drunk on shitty beer at a shitty bar.
      $20 can get a cabbie to take me most of the way home. Getting there (or getting my car the next day) is another $20.

      So, to go out and get drunk, it's roughly 200% more expensive to do it responsibly (ignoring the inconvenience factor as well).
      If you're on a budget, that's some serious motivation to drive drunk.
      Perhaps you can consider the finer points of how your taxes are spent after a drunk driver kills your friend or family member.

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
    11. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by ColdSam · · Score: 1

      You're assuming that using a taxi actually reduces the number of traffic fatalities. That's not clear.

      Although you are correct that they care more about keeping people from drinking than actual traffic safety.

    12. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      Perhaps if cabs were magically completely free, yes. Oh, and these completely free cabs would have to be ubiquitous and orderable on demand to any location, and not become scarce despite being free. While we're talking nutty hypotheticals, people might also drink-and-drive less if the U.S. has more compact cities, less sprawl and suburban bars, and better public transit.

      But back in the case of reality, what price-sensitivity means is more like: if cabs were 15% cheaper, would it eradicate DUIs? I suspect it would have virtually no impact on them.

    13. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      I agree, a 15% decrease in cost wouldn't do much when taking a cab adds 200% to the cost of getting drunk. Similarly, nobody would buy cars with airbags if the airbags added 200% to the cost of a car. I'd sooner not drink at bars, much like I'd sooner not buy a car.

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
    14. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by lhaeh · · Score: 1

      I suspect it would be much more then 15%: Speak to any cabbie, they make the vast amount of their money on Friday/Saturday night, but work the rest of the week because the licence owner requires that. If random joe with a car that he uses for other purposes decides to make some extra money on the weekend, I suspect he will be able to charge much less.

    15. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by jxander · · Score: 1

      Increase pub density!

      It's the only sensible solution. Make sure everyone has a pub (or two) within walking distance, to combat drunk driving.

      And as a bonus side effect, you combat obesity by encouraging people to walk more when they've been drinking (beer has a LOT of carbs)

      --
      This signature is false.
    16. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Uber were instead Find-A-Sobre-Driver.com, they probably wouldn't be receiving complaints. They're not sharing rides ("Hey, I'm going to X, anyone want to join?"). They're selling rides. That definitely counts as a business and falls under whatever business licensing/regulation a locality may implement.

    17. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      In this case, drink at home.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    18. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      Uber prices are largely the same as the established operators so this is a bit of a non-argument.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    19. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      This sounds more like a problem with the place you have chosen to live than a problem with taxi operators. Live nearer a nice bar with nice beer.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    20. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      I think you might be missing the point.

      Sure, I could take a stretch limo to a bar that serves Louis XIII de Rémy Martin. Then, as long as I drank at least a single shot, the cost of the limo would be a mere fraction of what I spent on alcohol.

      The point was that we're not all fantastically rich, and that while spending more on alcohol will make the taxi account for proportionally less of the night's cost, it will still increase the total cost overall.

      The problem isn't with taxi operators either. I used to drive cab. I brought home, on average, about $5 a day. I worked 12 hour shifts, 6 days a week, and I made nowhere near enough money to support myself. Driving cab is not a glamorous job, and it doesn't really lead to great riches. Fares can't really be cut any lower.

      The problem is that society won't recognize the broken economics of the "get a cab instead of driving drunk" argument. We moralize about drunk driving while opening bars in areas only accessible by car, then we act surprised when poor people drive their own cars there instead of tripling the cost of their drinking night by taking taxis. This is the inevitable outcome of our actions, so if we're serious about wanting to eliminate drunk driving, we're going to need a different approach. I don't know what that approach will be, but all I can say is that the current one obviously isn't working.

      Or, we could, you know, just keep on pointing at the awful drunk drivers, talking about how awful they are. Surely that'll get them to change their ways.</sarcasm>

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
    21. Re:Why does MADD not support Uber? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      We moralize about drunk driving while opening bars in areas only accessible by car

      The basic root problem is that we are a nation of the car, but you can't reasonably drive drunk. You can't reasonably get around without a car, because of our poor public transportation systems, a situation which was deliberately created — by rights, GM and certain oil and tire companies should be paying the costs of drunk driving.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  18. €200.000 for taxi licence? by jonr · · Score: 1

    I find that very hard to believe.

    1. Re:€200.000 for taxi licence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find that very hard to believe.

      Don't it's the truth.
      Here in Italy a taxi licence does cost between 200 000 € and 300 000 €.

    2. Re:€200.000 for taxi licence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It is believable. A taxi medallion in New York City can cost over $1 million.

      http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/15/nyregion/1-million-medallions-stifling-the-dreams-of-cabdrivers.html

    3. Re:€200.000 for taxi licence? by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      It's not a license. It's a medallion, which can be bought and resold.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    4. Re:€200.000 for taxi licence? by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      I find that very hard to believe.

      I agree, that's unimaginably cheap. Over here they're over $1M.

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
  19. $300k is cheap by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    A NYC taxi medallian can break $1M..

    And that doesn't include other regulatory costs, insurance, vehicle, nothing.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
    1. Re:$300k is cheap by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      It also doesn't imply that the driver can drive or anything like that, because the medallion doesn't have to be held by the driver. The driver can be changed out under the medallion by a taxi company. That's why that medallion proves absolutely nothing to the prospective taxi customer, and offers them absolutely no protection.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:$300k is cheap by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      It also doesn't imply that the driver can drive or anything like that, because the medallion doesn't have to be held by the driver. The driver can be changed out under the medallion by a taxi company. That's why that medallion proves absolutely nothing to the prospective taxi customer, and offers them absolutely no protection.

      Well, to be fair, it does mean that the customer will be paying too much for that cab ride.

  20. LOL Uber is competition ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    LOL if uber is fair competition, then time to give 300,000 H1B visas for some 'fair' competition!

    1. Re:LOL Uber is competition ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha! I posted something similar as well. Good to see others think the same way.

  21. reality is what we make by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    And it is the way it will be. Reality sucks for some.

    so you agree that it's wrong, and bad for our industry....what Uber is doing..

    we can force Uber to play by the same rules as everyone else, any government can, using the same mechanism they use to make Taxi companies compete fairly/safely

    you're probably one of those "privacy is dead" people...wake up and start living your life

    you've abdicated your own agency in your life choices...you're behaving like a serf w/ the "free market" as your master

    you can choose that existence if you want, and suffer and whine your whole life, or you can join those of us who are working to **fix things**

    this Uber flap is an easy fix...people like you are part of the problem

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re:reality is what we make by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

      >so you agree that it's wrong, and bad for our industry....what Uber is doing..
      At some legalistic level. What has become of the taxi industry and the laws applicable to it is worse.

      >so you agree that it's wrong, and bad for our industry....what Uber is doing..

      Maybe bad for your industry. Not bad for mine and it may be a wash for consumers. Lower prices, greater availability, more convenient interface, fewer protections.

      >you've abdicated your own agency in your life choices...you're behaving like a serf w/ the "free market" as your master
      Not me. I've never used them. Buy I can see why people would. Taxis in London are daylight robbery and horrifically bad service.

      >you can choose that existence if you want, and suffer and whine your whole life, or you can join those of us who are working to **fix things**
      How so? How are you fixing the taxi industry? I'm not in this fight. It sounds like you are.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    2. Re:reality is what we make by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      you're behaving like a serf w/ the "free market" as your master

      Wait, what...? You want the government dictating who is and is not allowed to drive people around, but people who want the freedom to do so without government approval are the serfs...?

      Apparently freedom is slavery and all that.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    3. Re:reality is what we make by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> so you agree that it's wrong, and bad for our industry....what Uber is doing..
      > At some legalistic level. What has become of the taxi industry and the laws applicable to it is worse.

      This.

    4. Re:reality is what we make by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Relevant: http://i.imgur.com/NdXor.png

  22. Re:"disruptive" = scam by nctritech · · Score: 1

    You'll have to explain exactly how it is that people giving other people car rides for a few bucks is a scam.

  23. Re:"disruptive" = scam by onkelonkel · · Score: 1

    "Scam" Do you know what that word means? A scam is a confidence trick or fraud. How exactly is uber tricking people out of their money?

    --
    None of them can see the clouds; The polished wings don't care.
  24. Re:"disruptive" = scam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Uber is a scam.

    No it is not.

    >It's people giving rides to people for money, connected via Uber's software.

    Yes it is. It's a service that allows people to pay for something they want.

    >Uber is acting as a taxi company but b/c "innovation" and hype and an app they get to break all the rules.

    The rules are shit, and they're designed to make it impossible for anyone else to enter the market without a lot of money. They are monopolistic and exclusive.

  25. scam is a scam...target is taxi companies by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    scamming other Taxi companies

    a scam is a scam whether they are taking out competition or tricking customers

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re:scam is a scam...target is taxi companies by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      a scam is a scam whether they are taking out competition or tricking customers

      So, Samsung is scamming Apple by selling Android phones that compete with Apple's phones?

      My view of the possible has just been expanded...and not in a good way.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    2. Re:scam is a scam...target is taxi companies by king+neckbeard · · Score: 1

      If they are doing so by providing a superior product in some way, it's not a scam. It's competition. Competition is generally a good thing.

      --
      This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    3. Re:scam is a scam...target is taxi companies by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      So, Samsung is scamming Apple by selling Android phones that compete with Apple's phones?

      Only when they violate Apple's patents to do so.

      On a more serious side, if Samsung ignored all the FCC regulations and sold untested phones to save a few bucks over Apple's FCC-regulated phones, then yes.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    4. Re:scam is a scam...target is taxi companies by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      taxi companies dug their graves they can fucking lie in them now.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  26. naive and fatuous by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    see above comment to Ksevio

    also, you're being naive and fatuous...."Uber is just giving people rides"

    you're practically echoing Uber PR....do you work for Uber PR?

    it's illegal to run a unregulated taxi service...that's what Uber is doing and it's unfair...

    **thats the cause of the protest**

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re:naive and fatuous by nctritech · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I'm looking at it from a bottom-up perspective. You're looking at it as "industry exist, industry is regulated, therefore anyone who wants to do something similar should be regulated exactly the same way." I'm looking at it as "why do we need the regulation that exists? What justifies each specific regulation? Are those justifications sufficient to reasonably support the regulation? What is the definition of a "taxi service" and how does it apply to Uber?"

      Also, a correction to your statement: Uber is NOT giving anyone a ride. Uber is a middleman service. They don't employ any of the drivers. By your logic, anyone who organizes a carpool is a taxi service and subject to the same onerous regulations that a taxi service is. If that means paying exorbitant amounts of money to the tune of hundreds of thousands of dollars for a "taxi license" then so be it. Don't like it? Don't set up a carpool or vanpool.

    2. Re:naive and fatuous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone who makes a business of organising a carpool is a taxi dispach service. Anyone who drives a carpool 8+h a day is a taxi driver.

      Don't' like it? Don't make a business of it.

    3. Re:naive and fatuous by j-beda · · Score: 1

      Anyone who makes a business of organising a carpool is a taxi dispach service. Anyone who drives a carpool 8+h a day is a taxi driver.

      Don't' like it? Don't make a business of it.

      How about 4 hours per day? 1? What if I do it once? What if I pick up a hich-hiker and he offers me some cash? To pay for gas? A doughnut? Where-ever you draw the line, the position is arbitrary as all of this exists on a continuum.

    4. Re:naive and fatuous by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Uber is not a carpool service, it just pretends to be one. When you pay per ride and the driver is compensated by the company based on the number of rides given, then it is clearly and unambiguously a limousine or taxi service. A carpool on the other hand, the driver is actually going to roughly the same location as the rest of the passengers.

      Or, one person says "I'm going the same way, let's go together and we'll split the costs", then that's a carpool. Whereas one person saying "tell me where you want to go and I'll take you there for a fee", then that's a taxi or limousine.

    5. Re:naive and fatuous by eepok · · Score: 1

      Bzzzt. Wrong. Thanks for playing, though! You were a delight.

      Uber is not a carpool or vanpool service. They facilitate a distributed taxi service. Carpools and Vanpools are formed wherein the driver and occupants share similar destinations. With Uber and Lyft, drivers are without destination until the promise of reimbursement for wear and tear, fuel, their time, and the facilitator fees is sufficient provokes them to pick up a passenger. That's a taxi service.

      The constant attempt to brand these services as "rideshare" or "carpooling" is 100% genuinely deceptive.

  27. Wrong amount by drummerboybac · · Score: 1

    Meet our good friend the pipe
    It can be used to, among other things,| seperate values, | Eh|

  28. Freedom of choice, let the users decide. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The cab customers that want the consistent price and quality government control offers can use legal taxis, the user that prefer lower cost or the specific attributes of the Uber service can use Uber. I see no problem except that the government is imposing its will illegitimately.

  29. f*ck Ãf¼ber by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No joerandom with gps can navigate complex streets like the real cabbies... we'll call you if we want it.

    it's driving a car, not building one. How complex can streets get?
    Oh shit, this street is too complex! Better call a cab!

    And if they are doing business in your neck of the woods, there must be some demand for it.

    1. Re:f*ck Ãf¼ber by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A long long time ago when I delivered pizza, I knew my way around the streets of numerous cities better than damn near anyone.

  30. scamming their competition & taxpayers by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    Uber's targets are other taxi companies and taxi drivers

    as I said above scams are scams

    Uber is scamming other taxi companies (and taxpayers)...THAT'S WHY THEY ARE PROTESTING

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re:scamming their competition & taxpayers by beltsbear · · Score: 1

      You need to learn what the word scam means. Uber may be breaking laws or violating rules, but so long as they reliably and fairly do what they advertise, it is not a scam.

    2. Re:scamming their competition & taxpayers by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      Uber is scamming other taxi companies (and taxpayers)...

      And taxpayers?

      Because Uber is breaking the government imposed monopoly that all taxpayers gleefully pay for??

    3. Re:scamming their competition & taxpayers by king+neckbeard · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter if Uber's business was gutting prostitutes on the streets of London, if they are not deceiving anyone, they are not a scam. In order to be a scam, some kind of deception or misleading is required.

      --
      This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  31. taxi? or limo? by cellocgw · · Score: 3, Informative

    A couple examples: the slang for rides in NYC is "yellow" for a taxi and "black" for a limo. The limos can pick anyone up but AFAIK can only charge a fixed fee for a given destination. Taxis are metered for time and distance (w/ airport exceptions).

    Here in the Boston area, limos are fixed-fee either per hour or per location (airports again), and are barred from being flagged down--they're reservation-only. Taxis can be flagged, but I think they are not allowed to pick *anyone* up if they are outside their designated geographic zone. E.g. pick up in Boston, deliver to Worcester, but not allowed to pick up any ride in Worcester.

    So part of the big question is: is Uber a taxi service or a limo service?

    --
    https://app.box.com/WitthoftResume Code: https://github.com/cellocgw
    1. Re:taxi? or limo? by jfbilodeau · · Score: 1

      ...or is it a third type of service?

      --
      Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
    2. Re:taxi? or limo? by Dynedain · · Score: 2

      Neither.

      Uber offers 2 services. The one that made them popular was operating as a limo service, but cheap, with fast booking and automated account. All the pluses of limo service, but none of the pains for scheduling, tipping, billing, etc. It's just a modernized towncar service without the legacy overhead.

      Uber's second service is UberX, which they introduced to compete with Lyft. Same principal as lift applies, in that it's community ride-sharing with some monetary compensation, but backed by Uber's existing peering infrastructure and billing systems.

      It's the second service that's getting them into so much trouble, not the first. The first service follows all the livery laws. The second service has all the uninsured, unlicensed, poor quality drivers. Like Lyft or AirBnB, the peer2peer "Sharing Economy" is fundamentally at odds with the legally-protected and regulated systems currently in place.

      --
      I'm out of my mind right now, but feel free to leave a message.....
  32. Streisand effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    European cabbies are low on credibility, and most people has never heard of uber. Streisand effect seems the most likely outcome :)

  33. London needs Uber by beltsbear · · Score: 1

    I took a taxi in London in 2005, it cost me $80 for a 15 minute trip. Yes, the exchange rate was bad, but I am sure that it is similar in price today. Yes, I took the underground there but it had closed for my return. Uber would bring competition and potentially lower prices.

    In related news, hundreds of thousands of Londoners just found out about Uber.

    1. Re:London needs Uber by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I took a taxi in London in 2005, it cost me $80 for a 15 minute trip. Yes, the exchange rate was bad, but I am sure that it is similar in price today. Yes, I took the underground there but it had closed for my return. Uber would bring competition and potentially lower prices.

      In related news, hundreds of thousands of Londoners just found out about Uber.

      Then you got scammed as simple as that. Surprising as this was London.
      I make routinely 15-20 minute trips in taxis in Milan and it costs me something around 20 €. Not freaking 50-60 €.
      Ok Milan is not London, but still the price difference is too much to be only "legal". I think the taxi driver though you were a tourist hence a good target to scam.

  34. who and how Uber is scamming by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    I've seen 4 comments and 2 downmods in 20 minutes for my comment...

    I'm at fault here...I always forget how naive /.'ers are about scams

    Uber is scamming ****OTHER TAXI COMPANIES**** and calling it "disruption"

    They are taking advantage of bribable or dumb localities that will *let Uber run unregulated Taxi service*

    Uber is a taxi service....they are scamming other taxi companies **and taxpayers who pay to regulate them**

    Besides scamming taxi companies (or "disrupting" them...) here's an example of what happens when you have unlicensed taxi companies...http://valleywag.gawker.com/uber-driver-arrested-for-kidnapping-a-drunk-woman-1585725711

    "Uber Driver Arrested for Kidnapping Drunk Rider"

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re:who and how Uber is scamming by jandrese · · Score: 1

      A Gawker link? Was the National Enquirer too credible?

      I really don't see the scam here. One can argue unfair competition because they're not playing by the same rules as existing taxi companies, but they deliver on the rides promised for the fares promised. They don't ask anything of other cab companies. I really can't find the scam angle at all.

      The bigger problem for cab companies is that Uber is proving to be a disruptive technology. They are able to offer considerably cheaper fares and service that is just as good or better than traditional cabs. They carry taxi insurance (through Uber), the payment system makes it impossible for the driver to monkey with his meter to gouge customers, it's just more efficient. Their biggest crime is not paying attention to the artificial barrier to entry that allows traditional cab companies to limit competition and charge monopoly prices.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    2. Re:who and how Uber is scamming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your comments are weak and look like the rant of a mad man with your use of asterisks, all caps, no periods, and one statement paragraphs. Your smoking gun Gawker link is embarrassing. For one, linking to the bastion of sensationalism, Gawker. And two, the DA's office dropped that case quickly.

    3. Re:who and how Uber is scamming by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      She should have paid the $1 non-rape fee.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
  35. What about self-driving cars? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Self-driving cars are obviously coming. Once they are here, the next step will be for taxi cab companies to get rid of their dumb car fleets and replace them with self-driving cars - getting rid of all the cabbies in the process. I mean, as a profession, that of taxi driver has its days numbered. In Western countries it has two decades at best. I guess cabbies will start going on strike soon over their impending doom.

  36. show me by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    ok beltsbear...

    you think Uber is breaking laws about competition but it's not a "scam"

    Uber may be breaking laws or violating rules

    right...

    in money/business when someone breaks laws or violates rules at the harm of others...

    it's a scam

    if I'm so wrong, show me a definition of scam that proves me wrong

    also, it doesn't matter...you agree that Uber is breaking laws and getting away with it...no matter what you're agreeing with my central point...this is entirely a conversation over a definition of a word...you agree with me on the facts

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re:show me by beltsbear · · Score: 1

      I said 'may be'. I do not know. I am not an expert on laws in the UK.

      A scam would be someone who takes money for a cab ride but does not deliver it, or someone maybe who charges an undisclosed fee to unlock the doors at the destination. Uber is not a scam. The user is not being defrauded, nor is the provider.

      Confidence trick
      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
      "Con man" and "Scam" redirect here. For other uses, see see Con Man, Confidence man, and Scam (disambiguation).

      A confidence trick (synonyms include confidence scheme and scam) is an attempt to defraud a person or group after first gaining their confidence, in the classical sense of trust. A confidence artist (or con artist) is an individual, operating alone or in concert with others, who exploits characteristics of the human psyche such as dishonesty, honesty, vanity, compassion, credulity, irresponsibility, naïveté, or greed.

    2. Re:show me by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Burden of proof is on you here. Show a definition of scam loose enough to include any law violation.

  37. Uber et all don't go far enough. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Making everyday drivers into ad-hoc taxis is a step in the right direction, and addresses some of the incredible taxation inherent in the licensing fees in some places.

    But it still does not fill the thousands of empty seats driving around every day in cars.

    It may be a little too revolutionary, but I remember visiting Cuba, where for many cars it was mandatory to pick up hitchhikers if you were driving a car with certain plates (and nearly half the cars on the road were licensed that way) one could even be fined for driving alone if there were hitchhikers visibly available needing a lift. Add information age solutions to this mentality, and nearly all cars could be coordinated to be carrying folks everywhere, at all times. The value recouped from wasted fuel driving 3/4 empty cars would more than recoup the loss of a dedicated industry. We could even increase the size of the cars in this strategy, to carry more people more efficiently. Oh, wait, I just reinvented public transit.

  38. How are they not licensed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are they referring to UberX? I use Uber black car service often. The plates are always "for hire" meaning that they are licensed.

    1. Re:How are they not licensed? by mythosaz · · Score: 1

      Black has a higher barrier for the drivers.

      Also, a number of "real" drivers use Uber to supplement their otherwise slow days.

  39. Re:"disruptive" = scam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you are OK if millions flee to your country? After all, immigration laws are "monopolistic and exclusive"?

    Lets see how this works:

    "Immigration rules are shit, and they're designed to make it impossible for anyone else to enter the market"

    I see, they protect your "standard of living" and are OK, but other rules are not because you don't agree with them?

  40. I still don't see the difference... by mark-t · · Score: 1

    ... between what Uber has set up, and simply giving somebody else a ride, but expecting to be compensated for one's time as well as gas. Is it illegal to carpool if the driver is profiting from it?

    Heck, before I got my driver's license, I would sometimes ask my friends who already had their license for a ride somewhere and pay them for their time and gasoline as well. Was that illegal?

    1. Re:I still don't see the difference... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in London it is largely about metering. only London black cabs may legally meter journeys. minicabs charge a negotiated price per destination. there seems to be some disagreement on how the app may be functioning as a later.

    2. Re:I still don't see the difference... by ledow · · Score: 1

      In the UK? Yes, it can be. Ask your insurance company.

      And many uses of vehicles, including licenses, are covered by a "not for hire or reward" clause. Not to mention it being standard insurance boiler-plate.

      Same for private pilots. Unless you've got a specific "passenger-carrying" licence for your plane/car, you're probably NOT allowed to be compensated for more than the reasonable costs of petrol (i.e. a friend agreement). The other exceptions are things like volunteering for a charity but even then the definition is so close you can't even (legally) take a chocolate from your passenger for the ride.

      What the law is on deliberately obstructing a road as a licensed professional driver, I'm guessing is a LOT worse, though.

    3. Re:I still don't see the difference... by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      ... between what Uber has set up, and simply giving somebody else a ride, but expecting to be compensated for one's time as well as gas. Is it illegal to carpool if the driver is profiting from it?

      Heck, before I got my driver's license, I would sometimes ask my friends who already had their license for a ride somewhere and pay them for their time and gasoline as well. Was that illegal?

      From what I understand, it is indeed illegal to do this in many locations. The rate used as the cutoff is usually the federal mileage write off rate. So if you charge more than 56 cents per mile, you are a criminal. Hurrah for regulation!

  41. Not SHARING by gerardrj · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When you share something you don't charge for it. Uber drivers charge so this is a very simple vehicle/driver for hire setup we commonly call a taxi. If they are a taxi then they must abide by the taxi laws: meters inspected by weights and measures, taxes paid, licensing requirements met. (call them a Limo if you want, the term is irrelevant for most all regulation issues)

    To be a "ride share" scenario the driver would have to have already been going to, near to or past the place you want to be. You could pay a little bit of money to cover the cost of fuel for the time the passenger is in the car.

    This is all pretty well spelled out in the aviation laws already and my guess will be those laws/regulations will wind up as precedent against Uber/Lyft. As a commercial pilot you may charge whatever price you can for flying a passenger to a destination. As a private pilot you may only share a minority of expenses with the passenger and not make any profit. Ex: if it costs $50/hr to fly your plane then you can share that cost with the passenger up to $25/hr. The passenger must also have a common destination/purpose. I suppose you could itemize your charges as $25 for flight sharing, $200 for valet service on the airport ramps but due to oversight and licensing I don't know any pilot that would risk that maneuver.

    So let's apply those same tests to the Uber/Lyft services:

    Cost to operate a vehicle: in the range of $.12 to $.25 per mile, Uber rate: ~$1.50 per mile, 6 times the actual operating cost:
          cost share: fail
    Common destination/purpose: The driver's goal is to get the passenger to the destination, the driver has no business at the destination:
          common purpose: fail

    --
    Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
    1. Re:Not SHARING by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 3, Informative

      Cost to operate a vehicle: in the range of $.12 to $.25 per mile

      I don't know where you're getting those numbers from, but the US Government currently reimburses for mileage put on privately owned vehicles to the tune of $0.56 per mile.

      Are you even including anything more than fuel, or are you assuming that cars don't have any other consumables and don't lose value from miles driven?

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
    2. Re:Not SHARING by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Are you even including anything more than fuel, or are you assuming that cars don't have any other consumables and don't lose value from miles driven?

      It has to be for fuel alone. Maybe oil as well.
      $4/gallon
      40mpg = $.10/mile
      30mpg = .13
      20mpg = .20
      Oil change $100@10k = .01
      $15k car depreciation@5 years@15k miles/year = $.20

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    3. Re:Not SHARING by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 1

      I'd argue that that's a bad deal, and not really a true sharing of costs.

      Average fuel economy is 26.4mpg, according to Google. $3.65 per gallon is the current average gas price. That works out to $0.134 per mile, or only 24% of the US GSA's POV reimbursement rate. That implies that fuel accounts for only one quarter of the true cost of driving, and that you've got about $0.426 per mile of costs that must still be accounted for. You suggest oil and depreciation account for only $0.21 per mile, so that still leaves another $0.216 per mile in other costs. Brakes and tires are two more obvious consumables that I'm too lazy to estimate the per-mile cost of. Either way, I think charging as much as $0.56 per mile could easily be considered "sharing", not "selling", since that's what the US Government itself agrees is a fair rate to reimburse someone for putting miles on their own vehicle.

      --
      Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
    4. Re:Not SHARING by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      I'd argue that that's a bad deal, and not really a true sharing of costs.

      Yeah, I got called away and hit submit before I could make WAGs for more consumables like brakes, insurance*, and what not. Hell, even my $15k worth of depreciation estimate is just that.

      Another factor to consider is that the federal reimbursement rate is deliberately fudged a bit towards 'worst case' vs average or median. I think they figure on you having a semi-expensive 20mpg truck paying 'next to airport' rates for gasoline.

      Still, even if you have a Tesla Model-S** that you somehow got for free so your fuel&maintenance costs are insignficant, $.56 per mile is only $22.40/hour figuring on an average of 40mph, or about $47k/year. Which is lousy when you figure that you have to pay both sides of FICA on it in addition to the other self-employment taxes, other business expenses, health insurance, etc... Note for others: Any job where you'd be an 'independent contractor', divide the reimbursement by 2 to make it equivalent to a salary/hourly wage job.

      *Commercial insurance is more expensive on the idea that you're driving more.
      **There is/was a Uber driver who uses his Model-S for ridesharing, read a blurb about him a couple months ago. Extra vehicle expense is balanced against lower fuel cost, insurance is apparently reasonable(the car has excellent safety characteristics), and generates extremely positive reviews from readers.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    5. Re:Not SHARING by gerardrj · · Score: 1

      I used my own car's real-world operations numbers and increased all my costs a bit.
      2004 Golf TDI

      These are number for operating the vehicle, not owning and so do not include depreciation, payments, repairs, etc. Just the wear and tear on normal service items. Uber does not claim their drivers are professionals or running a business so they don't get to do depreciation for purposes of "ride sharing". If they were taxi/limo drivers they could do that. Yes is costs more than this per mile to OWN a car, but not to drive it.

      (all figures are $/mile)
      fuel: $.09 [$3.77/gal at a real-world usage of at least 40mpg) (price/gal currently in Phoeinx, AZ)
      tires: $.02 [$1,100 every 50,000 miles. I use really nice tires]
      oil change: $.008 [$90 every 10,000 miles. includes air/oil filters]
      insurance: $.02 [$480/yr at 20,000 miles per year]
      miscellaneous: $.01 [washer fluid, headlights, etc. $200/yr assuming 20,000 miles]
      Total per mile operating cost: $0.18 or about 5.5 miles per dollar.

      Sure if you have an SUV getting 16mpg or a high performance car with really expensive tires or carry boat loads of insurance you can increase the cost per mile substantially, but that is an average car driven by an average person.

      So let me do an "average" truck the Ford F150 which is the most popular vehicle in the US line according to a quick search.

      fuel: $.17 [$3.55/gal 20mpg average estimated] (again price in Phx,AZ as of today)
      tires: $.03 [$970 every 30,000 miles (assuming Nitto 420s) and they are worn down faster than the tread warranty]
      oil change: $.005 [$50 every 10,000 miles] ) (10,000 is factory spec. even at 5,000 miles the cost is only a penny per mile)
      insurance: $.06 [$720/yr assuming 12,000 miles/ year]
      miscellaneous: $.03 [washer fuid, lights, etc. $360/ys assuming 12,000 miles]
      Total per mile operating cost: $0.29

      --
      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
  42. Self-defeating protests by jtara · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While I agree Uber and similar services are skirting and even openly defying regulations, these protests are self-defeating. The public will see the cab drivers as greedy and annoying.

    Uber needs to simply sit back and do nothing about it. The less said the better.

    In the U.S. these protests won't happen, unless the owners pay the drivers to protest. American cab drivers can't afford to take a day off to protest. The cab drivers are probably making less than the Uber drivers..

    1. Re:Self-defeating protests by nytes · · Score: 2

      Uber needs to simply sit back and do nothing about it. The less said the better.

      Actually, Uber took advantage of it by offering discounts in the cities affected. I'm pretty sure Uber gained many new customers today.

      --
      -- I have monkeys in my pants.
    2. Re:Self-defeating protests by shameless · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually, my office is right across the street from Uber's Boston HQ. A couple weeks ago I suddenly heard a mad chorus of car horns. Looked out the window and it turns out the Boston cabbies were staging a brief rolling protest by driving by and honking, handing out leaflets, etc. There was police and a news truck.

      I don't know what the situation is in Europe, but in many cities in the US the taxi industry is a victim of its own protectionism. Boston, for instance, has issued a fixed number of taxi medallions. If I wanted to start a cab company, I couldn't simply go down to city hall and get a license; they've all been issued. I'd have to persuade an existing player to part with theirs... which they won't do unless I shell out some SERIOUS cash. As in, mid-to-high six figures. The price of the car itself is down in the noise by comparison.

      The secondary market in medallions has turned them into major assets. Thus the city can't simply issue more medallions; that would dilute the value of the ones already out there.

      In the end, a policy that Seemed Like A Good Idea At The Time has produced a result where there's a fixed supply and growing demand. Until now policymakers just threw up their hands and ignored the issue because there didn't seem to be a good way out of this mess. The introduction of Uber and Lyft suddenly means the issue can't be ignored anymore.

    3. Re:Self-defeating protests by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I was there and I knew this kind of thing was coming, I'd stock up on eggs and toilet paper and let the fuckers have it.

  43. glad you agree? by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    One can argue unfair competition because they're not playing by the same rules as existing taxi companies

    They are scamming **other taxi companies**

    As I said, /. users are pedantic and naive, so of course they would miss that companies can scam each other

    companies scam each other all the time

    The problem is that ***you agree*** but don't care to ***fix it***

    whether you choose to call this cheating a "scam" or "unfair comptetion" is irrelevant

    why you don't want to fix it is the real question

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
  44. Enforce the law. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I certainly hope the police were out in force making sure none of these luddites were obstructing the public highway or failing to make progress.

  45. scam is a scam...target is taxi companies by N1AK · · Score: 1

    A scam is a scam when it's a scam. One of the wonders of the internet is that there are a veritable legion of sources you could use to find out that scam clearly doesn't cover this situation.

  46. The Cab Drivers Are Blocking Traffic? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 2

    Simple Solution:

    Take away their licenses. Re-issue them to somebody else who doesn't break the law by blocking traffic.

    1. Re:The Cab Drivers Are Blocking Traffic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, when you speed (break the law) the same should happen to you and your license should be revoked?

    2. Re:The Cab Drivers Are Blocking Traffic? by ledow · · Score: 1

      In case you haven't noticed - that already happens, to everyone.

      Not only that, if you have a passenger-carrying license, you are given even less tolerance over speeding violations.

      The fact that it might take two or three such violations to actually revoke a normal license if neither here nor there - if I was to just stop in a road and do 5 mph, I would be pulled over and penalised. Why not taxis? Just because they are doing it in protest?

      If nothing else, it's childish and counter-productive. Nobody uses taxis! So we're going make all the taxis in London participate in a protest that makes them useless and damages other driver's ability to travel! That'll get me on your side, whether I'm a passenger or driver....

    3. Re:The Cab Drivers Are Blocking Traffic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then jail them all when they completely blocks the trafic for days in fury? Or maybe just put a bullet through their head, and charge their family for its cost? I guess everything is easier when you live in a comunist or fascit country.

  47. naive and fatuous by N1AK · · Score: 1

    see above comment to Ksevio

    also, you're being naive and fatuous...."Uber is just giving people rides"

    you're practically echoing Uber PR....do you work for Uber PR?

    it's illegal to run a unregulated taxi service...that's what Uber is doing and it's unfair...

    **thats the cause of the protest**

    Accusing someone of being a shill while blindly parroting the taxi driver party line has to be some form of irony. Uber has been challenged in court in the UK and the judge ruled in their favour. Perhaps in Taxi fanboy land that still counts as illegal, but it sure as hell doesn't to most people.

  48. who and how Uber is scamming by N1AK · · Score: 1

    I've seen 4 comments and 2 downmods in 20 minutes for my comment...

    I'm at fault here...I always forget how naive

    Or maybe, just maybe, the huge number of people pointing out that you couldn't define a scam if one involved punching you in the face, and the absence of anyone else defending your incorrect assertion that a "scam" is whatever you think it is, could be a sign that your wrong? But what's the chance of that, you're clearly never wrong so it must be the rest of the world ;)

    Wow, look at you and your example of the dangers of Uber! I bet no taxi drivers have ever done tha.... http://www.express.co.uk/news/... "It included boots worn by a victim of taxi driver Christopher Halliwell, who killed Sian OÃ(TM)Callaghan, 22, after picking her up in his cab outside a Swindon nightclub in 2011. "

  49. Re:"disruptive" = scam by king+neckbeard · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I'm not a racist dick. Immigrants are a big factor in letting the US kick ass because it brings in new ideas, new people, and new culture. And in fact, a large share of the problems we have with immigration is because of the regulations that have been imposed on the immigration process.

    --
    This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  50. similar != the same by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    therefore anyone who wants to do something similar

    more fatuitousness...stop it

    Uber isn't "similar" to a cab company....it ***IS*** a cab company in practice...only rhetoric make it different

    Just b/c Uber uses an 'app' doesn't make it different....***CAB COMPANIES HAVE APPS TOO***

    NO matter how you parse language, its the same thing

    Its like taxi cabs are restaurants selling burgers, and Uber is an *unlicenced* food cart that sells burgers, and they set up right outside the legal restaurant, ****SELLING THE SAME PRODUCT****

    and the law allows it anyway b/c of language and you have to buy the burger with an app from the food cart

    its cheating, a scam, unfair competition, illegal....choose your language however, the reality is the same

    same product...not similar...THE SAME PRODUCT

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re:similar != the same by nctritech · · Score: 1

      You don't even know the difference between a product and a service. You also didn't read anything I wrote past the one word you're trying to latch on to in order to twist what I've said to suit what you want to think. Either you have a logical discussion about the topic or keep enjoying your incoherent, baseless, fundamentally broken monologue. At this point I might as well respond to you with [citation needed] and leave it at that.

      I think we're done here.

  51. Just like Polaroid ... by franblets · · Score: 1

    We may not always like it. But this kind of thing happens with technology shifts. In photography it devoured Polaroid and has nearly eaten the film industry. Go to a restaurant. People are passing their phones around not pictures. It will happen to most of the printed media. Why have a pile of magazines when you can just get to this stuff from wherever you are? Who buys physical media with music on it any more? Governments can try to restrict this through laws and licensing, but it is more likely that it will drive it underground. It is probably something that needs to be run through the idea mill a few times. Reduce the licensing requirements for cabs make them part of the Uber network... whatever makes sense. This is more about price and convenience than ruining the cab business. I have a friend who knew a coffee shop owner. Starbucks came to a nearby spot. There was much complaining and grumbling about ruined business. My friend complained as though it was predatory. When I suggested that Starbucks wasn't using predatory pricing and was frequently the butt of the $5 cup of coffee - he suddenly realized that it was the product being offered that was the killer.

  52. Against The Tide by JimSadler · · Score: 1

    The cab drivers do not have a unique issue. I know a used car dealer who feels that only dealers should ever be allowed to sell vehicles as dealers have to pay fees and meet many regulations that private parties do not. Obviously the only function of technology is to eliminate labor, both manual and intellectual. It is simply the cab drivers' turn to suffer the shock of a changing society. School teachers are being replaced by computers in many classrooms. yet we hear no uproar. Bookkeepers, girls Friday,and small office workers have suffered huge loss of employment due to cell phones and tax software. Even surgeons are at risk for replacement by robotics. And the howling will get louder. Commercial vehicle drivers of all types are going to cease to exist soon. The construction trades will take a death blow from 3d printed housing and components as well. This tide can not be held back nor should it be. Humans will be forced to change monetary and social policies in ways that no one has yet dreamed of and it is coming on fast.

  53. taxi? or limo? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "So part of the big question is: is Uber a taxi service or a limo service?"

    Or the question is for what reason do all of those artificially imposed limitations/requirement exist (along with all the others that you didn't mention)? I'm all for regulation, but it has to have concrete, reasonable, fair, easily quantifiable reasons for its existence. All of the restrictions on taxis sound less about safety/sustainability/etc and far more about maintaining the status quo at the expense of the public.

  54. Re:"disruptive" = scam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As someone who tired and ultimately gave up immigrating to the US, I agree with you on the regulations being a problem.

  55. You signed a waiver. NO LIABILITY! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Per Uber legal agreement

    The company does not provide transportation services, and the company is not a transportation carrier. it is up to the third party transportation provider, driver or vehicle operator to offer transportation services which may be scheduled through use of the application or service. the company offers information and a method to obtain such third party transportation services, but does not and does not intend to provide transportation services or act in any way as a transportation carrier, and has no responsibility or liability for any transportation services provided to you by such third parties.

    LIMITATION OF LIABILITY
    In no event shall the company and/or its licensors be liable to anyone for any indirect, punitive, special, exemplary, incidental, consequential or other damages of any type or kind (including personal injury, loss of data, revenue, profits, use or other economic advantage). the company and/or its licensors shall not be liable for any loss, damage or injury which may be incurred by you, including by not limited to loss, damage or injury arising out of, or in any way connected with the service or application, including but not limited to the use or inability to use the service or application, any reliance placed by you on the completeness, accuracy or existence of any advertising, or as a result of any relationship or transaction between you and any third party service provider, advertiser or sponsor whose advertising appears on the website or is referred by the service or application, even if the company and/or its licensors have been previously advised of the possibility of such damages.

    The company may introduce you to third party transportation providers for the purposes of providing transportation. We will not assess the suitability, legality or ability of any third party transportation providers and you expressly waive and release the company from any and all any liability, claims or damages arising from or in any way related to the third party transportation provider. You acknowledge that third party transportation providers providing transportation services requested through uberx may offer ridesharing or peer-to-peer transportation services and may not be professionally licensed or permitted. the company will not be a party to disputes, negotiations of disputes between you and any third party providers. we cannot and will not play any role in managing payments between you and the third party providers. responsibility for the decisions you make regarding services offered via the application or service (with all its implications) rests solely with you. we will not assess the suitability, legality or ability of any such third parties and you expressly waive and release the company from any and all liability, claims, causes of action, or damages arising from your use of the application or service, or in any way related to the third parties introduced to you by the application or service.

    The quality of the transportation services scheduled through the use of the service or application is entirely the responsibility of the third party provider who ultimately provides such transportation services to you. You understand, therefore, that by using the application and the service, you may be exposed to transportation that is potentially dangerous, offensive, harmful to minors, unsafe or otherwise objectionable, and that you use the application and the service at your own risk.

    DISPUTE RESOLUTION
    You and Company agree that any dispute, claim or controversy arising out of or relating to this Agreement or the breach, termination, enforcement, interpretation or validity thereof or the use of the Service or Application (collectively, ÃoeDisputesÃ) will be settled by binding arbitration, except that each party retains the right to bring an individual action in small claims

  56. Screw Cab Companies, They EARNED Their Reputation by DroneWhatever · · Score: 1

    I hope Uber and Lyft and any other competition puts shoddy cabbies and shoddy cab companies out of business. They earned the bad reputation they have, and that has helped to create the very competition that they now face. I say fuck'em. Maybe they will learn to stop taking people for a ride, stop pretending to be credit card friendly and then giving some excuse about needing cash, and my favorite, not using a GPS of some sorts. They lie about traffic when you insist that they take a certain route... The list goes on and on. Like I said, most cab companies can just fuck right off. If they are so worried about it, where is the outrage about rental car companies and limo services?

  57. You laugh... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    That's funny, but going by the histories of murderers and serial killers there's generally signs long before they actually kill somebody.

    Now it's not 100% by any means, but if you can blackball 90% of cabby murderers before they get around to actually killing you'd make driving a taxi safer than being a cop(for example).

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  58. you are arguing semantics by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    your entire argument is based on making distinctions where no differences exist...using language only....you refused to engage with the points I made...because they prove you wrong

    rhetoric...marketing words...hype...

    these ways of describing something do not change the actual existence of it

    what Uber *does* is the *same* as a Taxi company *in practice*

    the only reason Uber is able to do this is they got people to believe their hype rhetoric

    the only difference is semantic and **YOU KNOW THIS**

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
  59. Adapt by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Or die.

    If they cant keep up, get the hell off the road and out of the way. ( pun intended). Who do they think they are, the RIAA?

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  60. Uber Demonstrations Snarl Traffic... by peacefool · · Score: 1
    So, in response to a tough competitor - taxi and limo drivers decided to... make their own service even worse for a day?! Great tactics!..

    What else could they do in the threat of Uber coming to town?
    Beating their clients might work? Maybe, just being rude?

  61. Re:You signed a waiver. NO LIABILITY! by swillden · · Score: 1

    Did you actually read that waiver? It doesn't waive liability arising due to accidents. It's all about not promising any service level guarantees.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  62. Protest abut something that matters by GrahamCox · · Score: 1

    I can understand the taxi drivers' alarm but they're like Hansome cab drivers in the 18th century - change will come, sorry. But how about getting upset about something more important, everyone? Like the constant erosion of your freedom and privacy by the state? By the constant erosion of your wealth and societal benefits by bankers and other sundry plutarchs? Protest about something that matters, while you can.

  63. If you can't compete, FUCK YOU. by jcr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Uber exists because taxi service in San Francisco sucks, big time. Anywhere Uber is catching on, they're filling a public need. Customers are not property: if your competition does a better job serving them, you SHOULD be out of business.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  64. resorting to semantics by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    , the huge number of people pointing out that you couldn't define a scam

    exactly...you're trolling

    here's why: my point is valid whether you call it a "scam" or "unfair competition" or w/e term you want to describe the behavior

    for some reason, the truth of Uber's "business model" causes Libertards on /. cognitive dissonance so they attack my argument the only way they can think of: by arguing semantics

    it is a scam...but use another term and I'm still right...Uber is at fault here and the protesters are right

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
  65. Why not embrace the technology? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a great opportunity for the taxi industry to evolve and grow. If they incorporated Uber's technology (or something like it) into their existing operating procedures, they would crush Uber. All this hullaballo they're creating is just wasted energy and lost profit. People want the convenience of Uber, and the taxi industry already has the infrastructure to pivot into Uber's sphere. Sheesh, they need to get their heads out of their asses and follow where market demand leads. Uber isn't a threat. It's an opportunity.

  66. Please don't start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your comment in the subject line. Thank

    You.

  67. Just the start... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The internet disrupts all of society and creates new, usually informal / hobby / participatory ways of doing things. First out was publishing industries bashing hobby publishing (file sharing / piracy).

    What's next.. will hotels protest against couch-surfing? Traditional manufacturing industries protesting against home 3D printing? Newspapers protesting against blog competition?

    Well.. .we are already in the middle of some of this. 3D printing is being bashed because it can print guns. Blogs getting bashed and called "internet-hate" by established media. And a case in Belgium (?) where hotels/hostels demanded some kind of service classification to be allowed to let people sleep over...