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..
Competition sucks. Gotta keep that privileged access to the market.
I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
That is why they call it Disruptive Technology... in this case the reaction is quite literally disruptive.
I'm sure that's against the law.
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.
Well the protest backfired - drove more people than ever to download Uber in London
http://order-order.com/2014/06...
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?
If it read, "*Anti-*Uber Demonstrations Snarl Traffic..."
$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
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?
Cab drivers are almost thing of the past. Moment automated cars show up there won't be such thing anymore.
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.
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.
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
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.
Pro or Con, Uber is pushing the boundaries and bringing some clarity to the old system. Some terms for discussion:
Rent seeking
Fascism
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)
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.
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...
I find that very hard to believe.
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
LOL if uber is fair competition, then time to give 300,000 H1B visas for some 'fair' competition!
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
You'll have to explain exactly how it is that people giving other people car rides for a few bucks is a scam.
"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.
>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.
scamming other Taxi companies
a scam is a scam whether they are taking out competition or tricking customers
Thank you Dave Raggett
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
Meet our good friend the pipe
It can be used to, among other things,| seperate values, | Eh|
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.
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.
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
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
European cabbies are low on credibility, and most people has never heard of uber. Streisand effect seems the most likely outcome :)
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.
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
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.
ok beltsbear...
you think Uber is breaking laws about competition but it's not a "scam"
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
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.
Are they referring to UberX? I use Uber black car service often. The plates are always "for hire" meaning that they are licensed.
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?
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?
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
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
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..
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
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.
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.
Simple Solution:
Take away their licenses. Re-issue them to somebody else who doesn't break the law by blocking traffic.
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.
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. "
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.
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
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.
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.
"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.
As someone who tired and ultimately gave up immigrating to the US, I agree with you on the regulations being a problem.
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
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?
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
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
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 ----
What else could they do in the threat of Uber coming to town?
Beating their clients might work? Maybe, just being rude?
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.
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.
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."
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
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.
Your comment in the subject line. Thank
You.
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...