Over 30 Uber Cars Impounded In Cape Town
An anonymous reader writes Uber's in trouble again: 34 drivers in Cape Town, South Africa have had their cars impounded after being caught driving without a metered taxi permit. Uber says that the process of getting permits is subject to delays and drivers have been left in limbo due to a moratorium on new licenses last year. Cape Town says that it's been clear all along about what Uber drivers need to operate in the city and it's making no exceptions. Uber first arrived in Cape Town in 2013.
Give Uber a dictionary, and highlight the definition of the word "taxi".
Why? All require permits.
Or is it that now we can pick and choose which laws and regulations we follow? Nah this one isn't important to me so sod it?
There's all kinds of services people can offer without pesky government interference! Meal sharing could be the next killer app. Why pay restaurant prices when you can just search for a family with an extra chair at their dinner table?
It's like when your furnace goes out and you find some self-proclaimed handyman on Craigslist to fix it. Licensed, bonded, insured? Hah, those are just extra costs that would be passed on to you. You're saving a bundle and carbon monoxide poisoning is probably just some B.S. made up by those government brown nosing "legit" guys who charge higher prices!
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DRM is like antifreeze, to the MPAA/RIAA it's sweet, to the consumers it's poison.
This is South Africa.
The "delays" are more likely to do with the fact that Uber have failed to grease the right palms.
I don't agree with you.
Taxi regulations ensure that drivers are background checked. In Australia that make it illegal for the taxi driver to refuse a fare. They require the driver to have been assessed at a higher level than your once in a lifetime driving test. They log the hours that are worked by you as a driver so you don't work too many and hence get exhausted.
Is the system perfect? Of course not. But it is definitely better then no regulation.
And pedestrians, and drivers, and passengers, and other road users.
Simple regulations such as a taxi is not permitted to refuse a fare. It means people don't get left at the side of the road because they want to go somewhere less than ideal for the taxi service.
The fun thing here is that it is not Uber that got in trouble, but their drivers. Which aren't their employees, btw. Uber just looses a bit of revenues. The drivers, though, which own the cars, now have real problems.
That's the real innovative thing in Uber. They have found a way of shielding themselves from any problems. It really is genius, albeit evil genius.
Surge pricing has an interesting dark side that I see nobody talk about: cars are often too cheap for the service to be sustainable, in the sense that the money does not even cover the running costs of the cars when considering wear and loss of value on purchase price. Since noticing this implies a complex calculation as well as the mental makeup to take such calculations seriously, most drivers just don't notice. They are literally loosing money. Uber, however, always makes money.
It really is genius.
Why can't a taxi driver refuse a fare?
For obvious, known reasons.
Everybody knows you know, so why do you pretend you do not? Is it some sort of code?
So common, so obvious, yet you don't list any.
1. "So, you are black? Hell no I will drive you."
2. "So, you want to go somewhere where I'm not guaranteed a return fare? Hell no I will drive you."
3. "So, you are gay? Hell no I will drive you."
4. "So, you are Muslim? Hell no I will drive you."
5. "So, you are not from my country? Hell no I will drive you."
And so on.
Simple regulations such as a taxi is not permitted to refuse a fare. It means people don't get left at the side of the road because they want to go somewhere less than ideal for the taxi service.
That's OK when the taxi is state-subsidized. It's not OK when the taxi is privately owned. No one should ever be forced to do business with someone they don't want to. If it's state-subsidized, then it's not just business, it's a service, and there is a legitimate argument for forcing people to serve the needs of people they would rather not deal with at all.
If the state wants taxis to have to pick people up, then it can pay part of the tab.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
Well, that wasn't the argument. The argument was that if lawmakers think the consequences are bad enough to warrant regulation, then maybe companies (with a huge profit motive clouding their judgements of said matter) shouldn't just be able to disregard it.
xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
" No one should ever be forced to do business with someone they don't want to." You'd like to think that, wouldn't you? That may have been the way it used to be, but even in the US we have several cases of "forced business". The most recent was a flower shop in Portland court ordered under the Equal Protection Act that she had to make flowers for a gay wedding, never mind she claims "Jesus" told her it was bad.
Personally, I'm torn on that. One one hand, in a free country we SHOULD be able to refuse service to whomever we want. Yet that doesn't work out very well because people are racist, bigoted assholes. My rational mind screams that 1. religion is the root of much suffering 2 the whole "man laying with another man" in Leviticus doesn't apply in this situation 2b she's not a member of those people anyway (she's old, but she's not a 3,000-4,000 year old Jew) 3. making money off a group you feel are sub-human should make you happy.
There are several areas Uber has been playing with fire such as background checks, driving record checks, vehicular safety checks...Their going to have to come to some middle ground, and have enough transparency to satisfy level-headed State requirements. Driving your vehicle as a taxi seriously racks up miles and most "normal" people probably won't keep up their vehicles well enough after awhile. There was that Uber rape in India; but unfortunately that seems like an underground past time of our species; crimes like that should only 'ring alarm bells' if it goes over the statistical norm of the local taxi service. And the gray area that the drivers are in for wrecks, medical expenses, etc has kept my girlfriend from doing anything like that. It's very conceivable that if there is an Uberwreck the driver's insurance may refuse to pay out, the passenger might have to end up suing to pay the ridiculous medical bills...there is a big cost difference between normal, corporate, fleet, etc types of insurance policies. Even with some type of Uberinsurance it's still very gray with little to no case law.
They will have to somehow collect taxes from Uber, this isn't some "internet only" business. The private citizen's increased payments on road tax via their gas isn't enough to compensate the wear and tear from this. Perhaps they can get their app approved as a "meter" instead of forcing everyone to buy various meters for each municipality. I expect these seizures to increase worldwide until Uber addresses these issues.
If Uber sucks, don't use them. We're not talking about something extremely complex and life-altering here (like pharmaceuticals).
I like how you ignored the bits about better testing stnadards and logged hours to make sure the drivers are competent. A car crash does count as a life altering issue.
But hey, if you die in an uber related car crash, vote with your dollars and don't use them next time!
SJW n. One who posts facts.
There is no real reason for taxi regs these days beyond safety regs, which apply to all vehicles.
Again: this right here is the source of your ignorance.
You simply do not know what you are talking about.
There are real and concreate reasons for the regulation of taxis.
Your ignorance of that history is not a reason to dismantle those regulations.
But you can try if you want...you'll simply learn first hand why they existed in the first place.
Which is ultimately the end consequence of libertarianism: if it actually succeeds and is implemented, it will necessarily be abandoned as its followers slowly learn firsthand why we did things the way we did, a lesson they could have avoided if they had simply learned some history. When we talk about those who dont learn history being doomed to repeat it, libertarians are a prime example.
The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.