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Uber Starts Charging What It Thinks You're Willing To Pay (bloomberg.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: Uber drivers have been complaining that the gap between the fare a rider pays and what the driver receives is getting wider. After months of unsatisfying answers, Uber is providing an explanation: It's charging some passengers more because it needs the extra cash. The company detailed for the first time in an interview with Bloomberg a new pricing system that's been in testing for months in certain cities. On Friday, Uber acknowledged to drivers the discrepancy between their compensation and what riders pay. The new fare system is called "route-based pricing," and it charges customers based on what it predicts they're willing to pay. It's a break from the past, when Uber calculated fares using a combination of mileage, time and multipliers based on geographic demand. Daniel Graf, Uber's head of product, said the company applies machine-learning techniques to estimate how much groups of customers are willing to shell out for a ride. Uber calculates riders' propensity for paying a higher price for a particular route at a certain time of day. For instance, someone traveling from a wealthy neighborhood to another tony spot might be asked to pay more than another person heading to a poorer part of town, even if demand, traffic and distance are the same.

235 comments

  1. Don't think Uber will be alone with this by NotInHere · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Other companies will adopt this as well. They will charge you what you are willing to pay them. You won't even be safe outside of the online world, in retail shops the price tags will adopt depending on the time of day and maybe even, combined with face tracking, who is around.

    1. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by TWX · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is why taxi companies have to post rates and those rates are based on a combination of time and odometer, at least in many jurisdictions it's mandatory for them to do this.

      Uber is once again demonstrating why we have passenger livery laws, and in this case it might well be the first time that flouting it has a strong effect that's really felt by the customer.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    2. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > price tags will adopt depending on the time of day and maybe even, combined with face tracking, who is around.

      I'll do all my shopping in black face from now on.

    3. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      the gap between the fare a rider pays and what the driver receives is getting wider.

      Uber's profit margin is none of the driver's business. Don't get me wrong, I'm not defending Uber. I think they're scumbags and you shouldn't work for them. And if you don't think Uber is paying you enough, then that's another good reason to not work for them.

    4. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Beau1080p · · Score: 4, Informative

      Orbitz started doing this in 2012

    5. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not legal to charge different, individual people a different price. They are practically *begging* to be sued.

    6. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Funny

      Other companies will adopt this as well. They will charge you what you are willing to pay them.

      This is terrible. Someday, even flea markets and third world village produce stalls will start negotiating prices based on what they think you are willing to pay. We will look back to 2017 as the end of innocence, when Uber became the first company in history to discover price discrimination.

    7. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait until they get your browsing or shopping history. Then they will know who has money to spend.

    8. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when does Uber negotiate prices? They tell you the price, you pay or you go elsewhere for your ride. You can't dicker with Uber like you would at a flea market or a third world produce stall.

    9. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Don't get me wrong, I'm not defending Uber.

      You should defend them. They have every right to charge what the market will bear. They have every right to pay their employees what the market will bear. They are a business, not a charity.

      If you don't like what they charge, then use Lyft, or take a taxi, or walk. If you don't like what they pay, then go work elsewhere.

      Disclaimer: I use Lyft. I hate Uber. But although I don't like what they charge, I will defend their right to charge it (although, unlike Voltaire, not to the death).

    10. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you will if you vote with your wallet instead of shitposting on slashdot

    11. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by arth1 · · Score: 1

      It's not legal to charge different, individual people a different price.

      Are you sure? That would make "ladies' night" where women are charged less than men illegal, as well as hairdressers who charge a man less for a basic hair cut than a woman with the same hair length/volume.

      Not to say anything about medical services, where uninsured pay a lot more for the same services than someone with insurance, even when the insurance company pays nothing and it's all out of pocket.

    12. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      Wait until they get your browsing or shopping history. Then they will know who has money to spend.

      Their app already knows what phone you are using. So they could charge more if you have an expensive phone. They wouldn't be the first company to do that.

    13. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is generally legal to charge different people different prices as long as you stay away from using a protected class such as race or religion as a criteria for your pricing. Some state/local governments have laws limiting this somewhat, but not substantially.

    14. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who the "F" is shocked by this. supply and demand was taught in primary education. Way back in the days of Prince (read 1999) those of us that kept up with things.. saw this precursor...

      http://www.nytimes.com/1999/10/28/business/variable-price-coke-machine-being-tested.html

      This is not much different... except you trade local temperature vs. time or demand.

    15. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yeah, but the thing here is that while Uber's profit margin is really their own business, and they can charge what they like, they actually have a negative profit margin: the drivers are paid *more* than what the company is taking in from riders (at least, that's what I keep reading). That's not sustainable. But that's between Uber and their silly investors.

    16. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2

      It's not legal to charge different, individual people a different price.

      Hogwash. In the United States it is illegal to discriminate against an enumerated list of protected classes, including race, color, religion, national origin, etc. Discrimination is generally legal on any other basis. Some of these class protections are only for employment. For instance, age discrimination is illegal in hiring, but allowed in pricing (hence "senior discounts" and "student discounts").

         

    17. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 3, Funny

      I'm not willing to pay anything. Looking forward to free rides from Uber.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    18. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by SirSlud · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's really weird to me that people think that the fact that it's their right has anything to do with this discussion. The question isn't if it's their right, it's if they're exercising their rights in a way people are free to disagree with. And saying it's none of our business is a curious moot position to take: they volunteered the information. It's like somebody saying something really stupid, and you present a counter argument, and people say, "Yeah but, they have the right to say whatever they want." Yes they do. What does that have to do with breaking down what they said?

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    19. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Dunbal · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They have every right to charge what the market will bear.

      The customer has the right to know how much it will cost before the transaction occurs.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    20. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      It's not legal to charge different, individual people a different price.

      Are you sure? That would make "ladies' night" where women are charged less than men illegal, as well as hairdressers who charge a man less for a basic hair cut than a woman with the same hair length/volume.

      It's obvious that there is a difference between something that is generally agreed upon by both parties, and a pricing system that when applied at it's most efficient manner is one that if you were to ask the customer for any more, they would tell you to fuck off.

      Ladies night, by charging less for women, is designed to make good will from ladies, and more men would be likely to attend, hoping to get laid by some drunk woman.

      Anyone going to a hairdresser will understand that almost all women's haircuts are more expensive simply by virtue of the time it takes to perform the job. Even then, they have a price for a basic cut, a cut and wash, and all of the other things like coloring, perms, weaves, etc.

      But back to Uber, yes, if they want to charge a million bucks for a quarter mile ride, they can do that. And go out of business. And if they want to charge a woman half or twice as much as me, yup. But we also have the right to not use their service, the right to know they are charging some people more than others, and as much as we might defend it in principle, it is gonna piss people off, and is a great way to lose business. People dont' like that kind of shit, and businesses who do that kind of shit lose out to competition and ill will. But yes, Uber has a right to go out of business due to stupid decisions.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    21. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1, Informative

      The customer has the right to know how much it will cost before the transaction occurs.

      Taxis don't do that. Why should Uber? At least Uber gives you an estimate, but the final price can depend on traffic delays. I don't use Uber, but Lyft estimates are usually accurate.

    22. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by matbury6017 · · Score: 1

      Hey ShanghaiBill, let's revisit this conversation when you or a family member are in hospital with a life-threatening condition. Let's see, how much is your life worth to you sir?

    23. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by gweilo8888 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yes, they do. Your taxi has a set rate for every mile driven, a set rate for every minute of waiting, and a set rate for any addons like baggage etc.

    24. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by bondsbw · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's not like that is even remotely unique to this industry.

      I always fill up at the gas station, and I pay whatever the price comes to. The yogurt shop charges by weight after I pour and add toppings. My employer pays me for all the time I use to complete a task. This happens with or without an estimate; so long as the final charge is reasonable, people usually don't complain.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    25. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by lucm · · Score: 1

      Discrimination is generally legal on any other basis. Some of these class protections are only for employment. For instance, age discrimination is illegal in hiring, but allowed in pricing (hence "senior discounts" and "student discounts").

      How can we accept that kind of discrimination as a modern society? Poor people from poor neighborhoods should have the right to pay as much as Silicon Valley startup bros for their Uber rides.

      --
      lucm, indeed.
    26. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Groups of citizens in an area however can make an exclusive contract with a single company to provide a service.

      And they will want the company to provide service to the entire area for reasonable prices.

      And if you don't comply, they can fine you, confiscate your equipment, even put you in jail.

      You don't have a right to sell your product in a particular area without complying to local costs and legal requirements..

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    27. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From what I understand of facial recognition software, be prepared to be escorted off the premises perfunctorily.

    28. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1

      Difference with a taxi (or most other businesses) is that Uber has all your history, and may very well tempted to estimate a price based on your rides history (and not only based on place and time). For instance, if you're always blindly accepting the ride offered by Uber, you may get that +10%.

      --
      Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
    29. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2

      What they are doing here is charging you $2.07 if you are in jeans and driving a honda at 3pm but $2.75 if it's midnight and they know the other stations are closed. And $3.75 if you are driving a nice car at midnight.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    30. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      Uber's profit margin is none of the driver's business. Don't get me wrong, I'm not defending Uber. I think they're scumbags and you shouldn't work for them. And if you don't think Uber is paying you enough, then that's another good reason to not work for them.

      It absolutely is the drivers' and the passengers' business. It's the drivers' business because Uber proposed a deal where each party gets a certain percentage of the pay. It's my business because it means my money doesn't go towards paying for the service, but towards financing the greedy parasites.

      In addition, any system that wants to charge me more than someone else for the exact same service pisses me off in a major way. To the extent where I say "shove it up your ****" and use a different service, even if it is more expensive, as long as there is no unfair pricing.

      But we can see the reality here: Uber isn't effiient or cheap as some people imagine. Their prices are low because they pay the drivers little, and finance their expensive and inefficient service with investors' money. Now the investors' money seems to run out, they want to pass the cost of their expensive and inefficient service on to customers.

    31. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      Someday, even flea markets and third world village produce stalls will start negotiating prices based on what they think you are willing to pay.

      Where do you see that Uber lets you negotiate?

    32. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've only ever taken one Uber ride, but I told the app where I was (by allowing it to access my location), and where I wanted to go. The app presented me with several (three, I think?) levels of service I could access, and how much each would cost me. I chose the one I wanted, and that's how much I paid. There was some legalese in the phrasing of how the prices were presented, so I suppose they could have screwed me after the fact, but it was a much better estimate than the local cab company could have given in a similar situation, apart from some very specific and common routes (i.e. $AIRPORT to $DOWNTOWN will cost $FARE). Technically you could make an estimate based on their fare structure, but you're on your own when it comes to estimating the "time spent idling" portion of it.

      That said, I think Uber is a pretty reprehensible company and, as I said, I've only taken one Uber, when I really needed to and didn't have any other (better) options. Honestly, I've been to second- and third-world countries where haggling with a cab driver is customary and expected, and it's a pretty fair exchange (provided you're half-decent at negotiating). It can suck when you're tired or distracted, and would rather not play that game, but it is certainly a model that has the most up-front pricing of any taxi service I've used:

      "I want you to take me to this location."

      "It will cost you this much."

      "No, that's far too much. It should cost this much."

      [haggling ensues]

      "Okay, hop in."

      "Great, thanks."

      In this example, I've negotiated the price to the cent (or whatever) before I even get in the car. And, short of being kidnapped for ransom (which, if you're travelling in a part of the world where that is common, you should know ahead of time, and make other travel arrangements), I will only pay that much before exiting. It helps to have a variety of cash on hand, so the driver can't claim not to be able to make change, but it's a pretty solid system. I would much rather deal with this system than Uber as at least it's a person-to-person transaction. Some mysterious algorithm doesn't intercede on either of our behalves.

    33. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good. I won't use them either.

    34. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point that in most countries the taxis are by law required to charge a fixed price, is:
      * Because of the amount of fraud that is common with taxi companies.
      * Because taxis are often your only way to get to one place to another place, in fact there could only be one company servicing your town.

    35. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huge Damage.
      Western Sydney is privatizing certain bus routes without any planning. Bear in mind Australia has some of the most expensive taxis in the world.
      The weak excuse will be you have Taxi's AND Uber and maybe a train - whats your beef?
      Traffic delays may double in the next 5 years. Easy to guess public transport subsidies will drop or be frozen in time.
      If Uber milks the market - you are back to Taxi's - because tha'ts what they did.
      So you destroy competition under the banner of innovation, then hike fares up. Net result - Uber pockets some of the taxi franchise taxes.
      It will be back to where uber wont pickup in certain places.
       

    36. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should he, or you, defend them without being compensated for it? If you believe in the market so much put a value on 'defending' this; don't give it away for free.

    37. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by sonamchauhan · · Score: 1

      They can only do so because Google and Apple are siding with app developers to the detriment of their real customers. Don't know why (perhaps app-revenue/payment intermediation)

      Ideally, an app should only get what personal / calendar / address-book / call /message history / microphone / photo information I specify. I shouldn't have to hack my phone, or buy a second phone, to do this.

      Wait until true personal agency reaches computing - when your device has both the integrity and the smarts to divine and execute your intent, do the necessary account setup, data entry and transaction execution. Then it will cost nothing (in terms of user time and effort) to use Amazon instead of Jet.com, or Lyft instead of Uber.

      That'll be the next wave of change.

    38. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Uber is once again demonstrating why we have passenger livery laws

      Not quite. When Uber sets a centralised price based on some algorithm it is still deterministic. The reason we have the laws we do is to stop individual drivers from attempting to screw individual passengers when they believe they have some upper hand. This price may be variable to extract money from passengers but it is far from the reason why the laws were introduced.

    39. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      That gives the customer a rate, but not a transaction cost. Customers don't have a right to a specific transaction cost unless it's quoted up front as a fixed fee.

    40. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Right at that button that the consumer has the choice not to press.
      Even take it or leave it offers are still a negotiation.

    41. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That worked really well for Venezuela.
      --
      roman_mir

    42. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by aevan · · Score: 1

      Just compare car insurance prices: age and gender discrimination in pricing. (Amusingly when mentioning this to a local politician during his 'sexism at the hairdresser' spiel, he had replied that that was valid discrimination, as opposed to hair length/style/complexity/willingnesss-to-complain discrimination)

    43. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      Taxis have done this for years. It's also highly illegal. Yet another reason to not invest in Uber.

    44. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where I live, Uber tells you the final price, which won't change unless you make additional stops or significantly change the route or destination. If that somehow doesn't work and you're charged a higher price despite not changing anything (happened to me once), you can easily reverse this.

    45. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Recently, after an app update, they started doing smth like that. Set the route, look at the price; if you don't like it, close and reopen the app; select the same route; the price will be somewhat lower. This may be region-dependent though (I'm not in the US).

    46. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      The gas station has a big sign out front with the price of gas per gallon. The yogurt shop has a sign with the prices on it. I'm not talking about an estimate, I'm talking about a variable price that's kept hidden from you until after you've used the service. It's nobody's fault if you can't add up the prices on a menu or multiply the price per gallon by the number of gallons to fill your tank.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    47. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by asylumx · · Score: 1

      It's like somebody saying something really stupid, and you present a counter argument, and people say, "Yeah but, they have the right to say whatever they want."

      The problem with this analogy is that it happens IRL way too often to make it sound wrong :-(

    48. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by asylumx · · Score: 1

      They do know that. Uber gives you the price before you accept the ride. This issue is more akin to how Best Buy was caught showing different prices on their website if you were in the store than it did if you were browsing from your home PC a few years ago.

      BTW isn't Amazon doing something like this too? Don't they show different prices based on your personal shopping history?

    49. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      The customer has the right to know how much it will cost before the transaction occurs.

      No. They have the choice to use such a service or not though. Rights have nothing to do with it.

    50. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by dschiptsov · · Score: 1

      > negotiating prices based on what they think you are willing to pay you wouldn't believe, but they do exactly this in Indian (or Nepalese or Tibetan) spontaneous street markets since the beginning of time.

    51. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by HolgerHoefling · · Score: 1

      I think you are very right. But it may be also a lot more dangerous for them. This new pricing regime squarely places Uber as the entity that makes all pricing decisions and this pricing model really shows that drives have little to no freedom when they are working for Uber. From my perspective, under this pricing model, Uber drivers would have to be considered as employees, not independent drivers. Under this pricing model, Uber is not a fee for service platform as they could have claimed before (offering to bring passengers and drivers together and charging a fee for the service). Instead, now they are optimizing the price solely for their own benefit and contract out the work of driving to drivers. From a legal standpoint, I think this is totally different than before.

    52. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which Uber doesn't either, and that's the claim being presented..

    53. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "it's legal, so it's right" attitude is what is destroying your country. Laws are merely the musings of highest bidder; if you try and use them as a moral compass then you will truly be lost.

      Just because something is legal doesn't mean that it's right; nor illegal mean that it is wrong. Slavery, beating your wife and stoning those who disagreed with you were all legal until relatively recently, but they were always wrong.

    54. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They should be able to charge what they want but we don't have to defend it. They should be criticized.

    55. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      You should defend them.

      Why?

      They have every right to charge what the market will bear. They have every right to pay their employees what the market will bear. They are a business, not a charity.

      They are contributing to the failure of the market by participating in the race to the bottom. Defending them is an idiot's move.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    56. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It's not legal to charge different, individual people a different price.

      Of course it is. The poor are not a protected class. You are [theoretically] protected from discrimination on the basis of your religion, gender, race, national origin, age, pregnancy, or indeed your genetic makeup. But you are not protected from discrimination based on your social class, income, money in the bank, or any other financial basis. That is completely legal.

      What's not legal is for a taxi service to charge different prices to different customers, or to employ surge pricing. Uber's argument is that it is not a taxi service. Obviously this is bullshit, they are just a differently-dispatched and -staffed taxi service. However, since taxi services are regulated at state or even local levels, and not federal ones, Uber is able to engage in this battle over and over again.

      We have those laws regarding taxi services because society doesn't work if we deny mobility to certain classes of individual. Those laws actually are there to protect people on a financial basis, specifically to stop taxi drivers from neglecting the poor and only transporting the rich. So while there's plenty of precedent for stopping Uber from doing basically everything they are doing, it's distributed.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    57. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They only have the right to charge what the market will bear if they provide their own roads. So long as their business model relies upon unrestricted free access to taxpayer funded roads, so long as they use sidewalks as pickup points, and as long as they block traffic or take up curb space for drop offs, Uber will have to play by whatever rules the owner of those assets puts in place.

    58. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by stabiesoft · · Score: 1

      They have a negative profit margin not because they pay their drivers more (in the US), but because they sink a boatload of cash into buying hookers, booze, and drugs for politicians. They sunk 10 mil on trying to get austin to overturn their background check in a referendum and failed, so they went up the chain and spent an unknown amount on the texas legislature for a statewide law that trumps the local ordinance. Clever they are. The current rate structure is just the beginning. Once they have driven everyone else out of biz, they will seriously raise rates. So my advice is travel with anyone but these scum and to use more than one service to prevent a monopoly.

    59. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by mrclevesque · · Score: 1

      "That worked really well for Venezuela."

      Did it now, it worked really well in many countries, I didn't know about Venezuela.

    60. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is criminal.

    61. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like the way you think. Can I remodel your kitchen? Just give me some blank checks and I'll let you know what it cost when I'm done.

    62. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by fph+il+quozientatore · · Score: 1

      Airlines have been doing this, like, forever, and no one ever batted an eye.

      --
      My first program:

      Hell Segmentation fault

    63. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That's exactly the point! How is a guy driving an Uber a couple hours a day after work supposed to bribe politicians with booze and hookers on his own? Have you seen what hookers charge these days? The cost has to be spread out across thousands of drivers all over the country. That's where Uber comes in.

    64. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know anything about women being charged less than men for an equal haircut, and the cost of medical services is way too convoluted to discuss here (not defending them, they need fixing, that discussion simply is not for here), but yes, in some jurisdictions Ladies' Nights are illegal.

    65. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "Other companies will adopt this as well"

      Are you kidding!? Barring government regulation, that's they way companies run since forever: pay the producer as little as you can get with and then ask the buyer as much as you can come with.

      The only difference is how clever are they at that, but the basic fact remains.

    66. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by TWX · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's not true that no one has batted an eye, and it's also not entirely true that airlines have been doing exactly this either.

      If I understand Uber and its ilk, the amount of time between booking a ride and taking the ride is short, minutes to hours, to the point that it's essentially a single act. By contrast, the amount of time between booking an airline seat and taking the flight is usually days or weeks, and sometimes even months, and since airlines themselves are financially tied to the aircraft (either leasing or outright ownership) they are paying for the the vehicle in addition to the staffing and everything else; the airline takes on the financial risk. Fares start low-ish to attract travelers, rise as time to the flight shortens, then may plummet reasonably close to the flight to try to fill-in seats, then skyrocket in the last couple of hours to profit off of demand for last-minute bookings before getting even cheaper as standby passengers are booked.

      I do not care for how airlines price fares, but since airlines are the entity bearing the financial burden of the entire aspect of the flight then I am less annoyed by it. Uber doesn't own the cars, doesn't pay salaries to the drivers whether they're driving or not. If Uber is pushing the financial aspect of the risk to the drivers then it shouldn't claim one thing to the passenger and another thing to the driver.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    67. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Desler · · Score: 1

      Why would you give your life for a corporation when it wouldn't lift a finger for you in return? Why are you loyal legal-fiction being? That statement is so bizarre.

    68. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by haliburns · · Score: 1

      Eventually companies will know so much about you that everything will be priced as a percentage of your wealth and we will all be exactly equal in the perfect socialist dystopia.

    69. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by hawk · · Score: 1

      It's older than that.

      Some airlines used cookies in the late '90s or 2000, and charged a higher price when you returned. You could be offered the original again by deleting the cookies.

      hawk

    70. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but honestly, how likely is it they could run everyone else out of business? The core of their business is "ride-sharing", which really means a cellphone app which tracks drivers and matches them up with riders. It's not that technically difficult, and other companies exist doing the same thing, namely Lyft. Other cab companies have actually made similar stuff now in response, Anyone with a little capital could make a similar app; it's just not that hard. I don't see how Uber could possibly corner the market here. A new competitor could come up any time to challenge them if their rates to customers get too high.

    71. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by buchanmilne · · Score: 2

      "Uber's profit margin is none of the driver's business. Don't get me wrong, I'm not defending Uber. I think they're scumbags and you shouldn't work for them. And if you don't think Uber is paying you enough, then that's another good reason to not work for them."

      But the issue is that Uber is partly able to undercut Taxis because they claim that theuy aren't a taxi company and don't employ drivers and merely take a percentage commission for facilitating a transaction between a rider and an independant driver.

      If they are now paying drivers from one algorithm and charging riders from a different one, I don't see how they can continue to claim that they are a 3rd party in the transaction between the rider and the driver, and should no longer.ne exempt from laws that apply to taxi operators.

    72. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We will look back to 2017 as the end of innocence, when Uber became the first company in history to discover price discrimination.

      Ssshhh! Don't tell the airlines about that, just imagine how much they will start charging for seats. Oh, wait...

    73. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      While i agree with your point, as we become a more complex society it becomes harder to agree on a common morality.

      Some societies legitimately value the individual over the group.

      Some societies legitimately value the group over the individual.

      Morality is often arbitrarily set by religion.

      And when money is at stake, people's morality becomes a lot more flexible. And they sincerely believe they are being moral while doing whackjob evil shit.

      On top of that, companies spend hundreds of billions of dollars to influence and change our morality. To the point that people support positions which are against those people's self interest (even to the point of early death).

      My point is that appealing to what's moral is not as clear as we would like it to be. And very often, people appealing to morality are bad actors.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    74. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by dougdonovan · · Score: 1

      are you mental, stoned, drunk or sober.

    75. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is exactly the reason why the laws were introduced.

    76. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You think Uber will leave the regulations alone when they're a monopoly? They'll go hard as nails when the time comes, putting the barriers to entry back up, only this time ensuring they are the ones protected.

    77. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great. Creates an opportunity for people with Hondas and jeans to buy cheap gas and deliver it to Beverley Hills.

    78. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you know that haggling is not universal? In some cultures people just don't care about your business enough to be bothered. No not even the owner of the business. They really don't care. So they don't negotiate even a little. Yes it's weird, but different cultures are different.

      Where I live prices are set based on what nearby businesses are charging and they don't compete with each other. They charge exactly the same price. They collude. If you don't want to give them your money they don't care even a little bit. It makes not the slightest difference to them. The local businesses decide on a price and stick to it. Full stop.

      Taxis have a meter and they are mostly used here and they are very cheap. Other types of rides do haggle a bit though, but mostly it's just a very cheap fixed price per person and that is that.

    79. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by minstrelmike · · Score: 1

      Other companies will adopt this as well. They will charge you what you are willing to pay them. You won't even be safe outside of the online world...

      I've read of drink vending machines (soda pop and water bottles) that charge more depending on the outside temperature.

    80. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by minstrelmike · · Score: 1

      Airlines have an entirely different economic model with entirely different economic issues, if you care to enlighten yourself about the problem of empty seats on airlines.

      Uber and taxis and limousine services and even charter airflights do not have the limitations that commercial airlines, trains and busses have.

    81. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you saying that a customer should feel cheated unless he finds Uber's profit margin to be acceptable? All the customer needs to know beforehand is whether the customer finds Uber's price to acceptable when compared to the customer's cost (monetary and otherwise) for purchasing alternate modes of transportation (of which there are many).

    82. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good. Then we won't see you shot.

    83. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least with airlines I have a few choices between major destinations and those airfares can be competitive at times.

      Popular destinations in the airline world can attract many air carriers provided the destination airports have available "landing slots" to support the demand and thuse keep prices low.

      Uber simply realizes that they are holding their target customer segment hostage for a higher price. Uber's target customer segment either does not own a car or chooses not to drive their car on that day, yet that target customer segment tends to be in a hurry to get somewhere. When Uber couples the higher demands for their car-hire service with customers that have inflexible travel needs, the natural result is a higher price for the customer.

    84. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This type of personalized variable pricing is a reality. In public marketplaces, you see it often when a customer walks in shop owner's look at the person's shoes, clothing, accessories, and any other property they have of value and try to assess how much they're worth. Based on that, they negotiate a price. Come in wearing a suit and I can assure you you'll be charged more than if you're wearing a t-shirt and dirty shorts. Most vendors do this anytime quotes are required as well.

      The problem I have with this economic model is that ultimately, it turns &every transaction* into a complex haggle situation. Even if it's automatted, producers/providers are essentially haggling the customer, except in this case the customer has limited recourse (you can accept or decline once, maybe alter your behavior over time to push specific prices down). That haggled price for that transaction is fixed. Do you want to deal with used car salesman tactics every time you buy bread at the grocery store? Or in far more serious medical situations?

      What you as an individual customer may be willing and capable of paying for a specific transaction should not drastically change the price of a product or service.

      This is the future though folks. Consumers will just bend over more and take it and those aware of the situation will be cornered by mass acceptance. This is the trend.

    85. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      If you know the rate, then you know the transaction cost.

    86. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      My point is that appealing to what's moral is not as clear as we would like it to be.

      This is, as it has always been, true. However, I think that most people can agree that "legal" and "moral" are two independent concepts and it's possible for something to be legal and immoral as well as illegal and moral -- regardless of your personal sense of what is "moral".

      So the idea that legal == right is clearly incorrect.

      And very often, people appealing to morality are bad actors.

      I would take this further and say that this is true the vast majority of the time.

    87. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      Uber's profit margin is none of the driver's business.

      By the same logic, then, how wealthy Uber's customers are or are not is none of Uber's business.

    88. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      The reason we have the laws we do is to stop individual drivers from attempting to screw individual passengers when they believe they have some upper hand.

      Isn't this precisely what Uber is doing?

    89. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      You are incorrect. It is entirely legal to charge individualized prices.

    90. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      Even take it or leave it offers are still a negotiation.

      Only if your definition of "negotiation" is so loose as to be essentially meaningless.

    91. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      They can only do so because Google and Apple are siding with app developers to the detriment of their real customers. Don't know why (perhaps app-revenue/payment intermediation)

      App developers are Google's real customers. Both Apple and Google take a cut of any app sales through their store, but of the two only Apple gets any money from the person who buys the phone directly (and so has two sets of real customers, the phone users and the app developers).

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    92. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      No you don't because the variables that the rate attached to vary. That is precisely why it's quoted as a rate in the first place.

    93. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      No, because Uber quote you the price up front. There's a very different dynamic to being in a cab at your destination and told you owe ${extortionate rate} vs opening an app and it saying "If you click below you will agree to be charged ${extortionate rate}" and seeing a cancel button to the side.

    94. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      This is true, but that doesn't take away from the truth that this is also Uber "attempting to screw individual passengers when they believe they have some upper hand" at the same time.

    95. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      If I know that the rate is $1 per mile, and I know that the trip I am taking is 10 miles, then I know that the transaction cost is $10.

    96. Re:Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >They will charge you what you are willing to pay them.

      You mean like colleges?

    97. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      But the rate is not $1 per mile. The rate is per mile and per time. Some quote rates as per mile while doing above 10mph and per time below. Both are an unknown variable due to potentials for road blocks and traffic jams.

      What you know is not the problem. It's what you don't, and what can change.

    98. Re: Don't think Uber will be alone with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both are an unknown variable due to potentials for road blocks and traffic jams.

      Where the fuck do you live?

  2. San Fransisco becomes more unaffordable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone's going to have to start riding bikes here

    1. Re:San Fransisco becomes more unaffordable by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      Too many hills. We'll all have to move to the East Bay where it's flatter and cheapper, but hotter and boring.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  3. Tracks by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    Simple then, just take your Uber ride to the wrong side of the tracks, then walk across the tracks to the right side where you live.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    1. Re:Tracks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple then, just take your Uber ride to the wrong side of the tracks, then walk across the tracks to the right side where you live.

      Assuming you either figure you won't get mugged or are ready to defend yourself until you have reached the right side of the tracks.

    2. Re: Tracks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why should you have to do this?

      Time to support your LOCAL taxi companies again. These guys are proven to be crooks over and over?

      Donate your money to a good cause if you have too much.

    3. Re: Tracks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish I had mod points niglet

    4. Re:Tracks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      This!

      When I Ubered from the Orlando, FL airport, the ride was wicked expensive because to service the airport, there were special requirements (black limo or upscale SUVs only) and the driver said they had to pay $1000 per year for the privilege of picking up fares there.

      The return trip to the airport was half the cost, and that driver explained the strategy for my next trip. Get your airport ride to the nearest restaurant, and then call a normal Uber from there to wherever you are actually headed.

      I thought that was a wonderful market response to Uber price gouging.

    5. Re:Tracks by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      Plenty of airports have a well known off-airport location for ride-sharing pickups. Sometimes these are walkable from the airport, but otherwise a short ride on a shuttle or public bus. If I am flying into an unfamiliar airport, I do some googling ahead of time so I know what to do when I get there.

    6. Re:Tracks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is it ride-sharing if you pay for a ride? That's not what sharing is all about. Most six year olds know the difference between sharing and selling. How come so many adults don't?

    7. Re:Tracks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a wonderful response that shouldn't have to be. That's what's irksome about Uber. Their posturing as cab service in ubiquity while maintaining a multi-tiered level of service, with the cheaper option available only to those in the know. This is orders of magnitude beyond local cabbies fleecing dumb tourists with the "scenic route". Most of all I resent the encroaching need to economically min-max every action in my life thanks to these bullshit "disruptors". Also, one human to another, I hope you don't have to spend too much time in Orlando on the regular.

      CAPTCHA: fairer

    8. Re: Tracks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not uber price gouging though as its airport government rules.

  4. "How much will that be..?" by Dutchmaan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "...How much you got!?"

    (I think they call this a shake down)

    1. Re:"How much will that be..?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the hipsters like to call it an "auction." :)

      (Not directed to parent, because he obviously gets it: Either you knew this was coming, or you're an idiot.)

    2. Re:"How much will that be..?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think there are a couple of significant differences to a shakedown.

      1. They tell the price ahead of service

      2. There are competing providers of that service which provides a limitation on pricing.

      Supermarkets charge more in poorer areas because wealthy people are more likely to travel to find a cheaper price. Sometimes it just works out like that. They still have to be cheaper than a taxi to get the ride. Are you going to pay more to a taxi because you think uber is charging you too much?

    3. Re:"How much will that be..?" by acroyear · · Score: 1

      They don't even need to ask. All they need to do is somehow link up your phone and account with your Google, Facebook, and Amazon cookies and they can get all of that info they want.

      --
      "But remember, most lynch mobs aren't this nice." (H.Simpson)
      -- Joe
  5. Regulated Taxis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So now do you understand why taxi companies are regulated?

    1. Re:Regulated Taxis by Luthair · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pretty much this, we ended up with regulated rates because when taxis did what they wanted we ended up with unpredictable and predatory pricing.

    2. Re:Regulated Taxis by Imrik · · Score: 1

      No one really had a problem with taxis being regulated. The problem was that both the number of companies and the number of taxis were severely limited. This led to a low supply and high prices along with no motive to give better service. Until ride sharing companies moved in the taxis around here were still using credit card imprinters and would often refuse service or in the worst case, kick people out partway if they found out they weren't using cash.

    3. Re:Regulated Taxis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If only I had mod points. Fucking hell this is the truth the massholes fail to realize. Uber *IS* a taxi that has all the same overhead and now they are becoming a taxi company just like the rest, requiring the same fucking bullshit as ever. Fucking tech bubble morons.

    4. Re:Regulated Taxis by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      So now do you understand why taxi companies are regulated?

      Yes. To create artificial scarcity and generate a lucrative market for medallions and permits.

    5. Re:Regulated Taxis by udachny · · Score: 1

      This is good stuff, uber is doing something good here. They are actually innovating and opening more space to competition. I like it.

    6. Re:Regulated Taxis by Luthair · · Score: 1

      The problem was that both the number of companies and the number of taxis were severely limited. This led to a low supply and high prices along with no motive to give better service.

      The part that you're overlooking is that roads are a scarce resource in cities, so we really don't want a large number of hire cars circling adding to congestion. I'd say the second half of the argument is also false, you don't have to look hard to find a lot of complaints about drivers for either of the Internet taxi dispatchers.

    7. Re:Regulated Taxis by Luthair · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Roads are a scarce resource in large cities, we don't actually want a large number of taxis on the road. The part of the medallion system that is dumb is that it isn't tied to the driver.

    8. Re:Regulated Taxis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd rather everybody have to own a car and require parking where they are going just to remove a few taxis from the roads?

    9. Re:Regulated Taxis by Imrik · · Score: 1

      The issue wasn't so much the complaint worthy service by some drivers, but rather the antiquated systems that caused it. Using credit card imprinters to deal with cards until 2014 or thereabouts was ridiculous.

    10. Re:Regulated Taxis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We just need a use tax, per vehicle, per mile, based on vehicle weight.

    11. Re:Regulated Taxis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pretty sure that fleecing your customers and workers isn't "innovation", it's been around for some time.

    12. Re:Regulated Taxis by damas · · Score: 1

      Fixed it for you:
      The part that you're overlooking is that roads are a scarce resource in cities, so we really don't want a large number of private cars looking for free parking adding to congestion. See: http://www.economist.com/news/... and http://www.economist.com/news/...

    13. Re:Regulated Taxis by swb · · Score: 1

      You've argued in two comments about road scarcity meaning "we don't want a large number of taxis on the road."

      That's idiotic -- non-taxi vehicles outnumber taxis by a huge number nearly everywhere, probably even in Manhattan. Doubling the number of taxis would be a single digit increase in the number of total vehicles in most places.

      There's a sound argument that convenient and easily obtainable hired car service would be a meaningful reduction in the number of private vehicles used. Driving a private car versus taking a cab is driven at least in part by convenience and the uncertainty of obtaining another kind of transportation.

      The part of the medallion system that is dumb is that it isn't tied to the driver.

      If you're concerned about the number of taxis on the road, then this would work against you. If the medallion was tied to the driver, you'd likely end up with more cabs as each individual driver could work more hours and put more cabs on the street simultaneously.

    14. Re:Regulated Taxis by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      What you taxicab socialists are overlooking is that any ride service where the supply is able to accommodate any demand is inherently cheaper than any ride service that limits the number of providers.

      Not only do I Uber, but on occasion to Walmart. May your heads explode.

    15. Re:Regulated Taxis by Luthair · · Score: 1

      I'm not advocating that everyone drives downtown. Taxis also take more space as in addition to the trip they drive to/from the another fare.

    16. Re:Regulated Taxis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, cheaper. But also adds more traffic congestion, making it harder to drive, for delivery trucks to get through, for buses to run, etc. These are competing public goods. The few cities in the US that limit the number of taxis (New York and Chicago, for instance) are ones where these things are major problems and they, unsurprisingly, chose to restrict the number of taxis in an attempt to make them relatively expensive compared to public transit and free up road space for things that have to be there. Smaller cities with fewer congestion problems almost universally do not limit them.

      Cheapness of a cab ride is not the goal here; cities that limit cabs are deliberately trying to increase the price to reflect the outsize usage of common resources (roads) cabs have relative to other kinds of transportation. The alternative would be tolls everywhere ("congestion pricing"), but that is much harder to implement. Maybe that's where we are going, though...

    17. Re:Regulated Taxis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've argued in two comments about road scarcity meaning "we don't want a large number of taxis on the road."

      That's idiotic -- non-taxi vehicles outnumber taxis by a huge number nearly everywhere, probably even in Manhattan. Doubling the number of taxis would be a single digit increase in the number of total vehicles in most places.

      There's a sound argument that convenient and easily obtainable hired car service would be a meaningful reduction in the number of private vehicles used. Driving a private car versus taking a cab is driven at least in part by convenience and the uncertainty of obtaining another kind of transportation.

      Have you been to Manhattan? Easily 60% of the vehicles on the road are cabs. And limiting taxis is quite rare -- it is basically only cities like New York that do it. Why? Because such a huge fraction of the vehicles are cabs. I think the only other US cities with medallions are Boston and Chicago, both of which have terrible traffic and high cab volumes downtown.

    18. Re:Regulated Taxis by hawk · · Score: 1

      The wonders of supply and demand is such that if you're willing to pay, you can even get driven in a classic Cadillac . . .

      A couple of weeks ago, wealthy folks had an Elvis themed wedding, and contacted our club to drive the guests and Elvi (yes, "Elvis" has a plural in Las Vegas, and we need it . . .) from the private terinal to the Casino.

      It wasn't cheap; they paid $250/car--and, once we pointed it out, the $50 surcharge on our classic car insurance for commercial use . . .

      Interestingly they got the price dead-on to get ten of us. We could have coaxed a couple more out if we had needed to. but we had exactly ten volunteers two days before.

      (OK, this was cool enough that we probably would have done it for nothing, or for a donation to the club and/or one of the charities we support, but . . .)

      hawk

      p.s. Yes, one of the cars was indeed a pink '59, which was the zenith of excessive tailfins . . .

      p.p.s. And, yes, that wasn't the original color; the iconic pink was last used on Cadillacs the factory a year or two earlier (although it's always been possible to order a Cadillac with a custom color from the factory)

    19. Re:Regulated Taxis by Imrik · · Score: 1

      However that only works if the increased prices push people to public transit instead of to privately owned cars.

    20. Re:Regulated Taxis by trawg · · Score: 1

      Watching Uber (and many of the other p2p companies) re-derive regulatory fixes for common problems from first principles is a fun pastime!

  6. Finally! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My choice to live in the ghetto part of town might actually pay off!

    1. Re:Finally! by NFN_NLN · · Score: 1

      "choice", hehehe.

    2. Re: Finally! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until the drivers bitch for hazard pay.

  7. Dahon by bmo · · Score: 2

    Dahon makes these wonderful fold-up bikes you can take on mass transit and not look like an asshole (though you will look like a bear riding a bicycle).

    When you make pricing unpredictable, customers are going to stay away in droves. As will I.

    "But you're taking your life in your hands by biking in Boston"

    It's not any worse than say, Providence or Warwick.

    --
    BMO

  8. What is a Tony spot? by 0xdeaddead · · Score: 2

    Tony the tiger??? Is it great? Tigers have stripes, not spots.

    1. Re:What is a Tony spot? by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 2

      "Tony" is an upscale word for "upscale "

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    2. Re:What is a Tony spot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm assuming it's a typo and they meant "tory".

    3. Re:What is a Tony spot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Piffle. Upscale spots are Reginalds or Chadwicks, at minimum.

  9. Next step... by MtHuurne · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...Uber starts paying its drivers what it thinks they're willing to accept.

    1. Re:Next step... by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 3, Informative

      I think that they've been doing that for a while.

    2. Re:Next step... by dschiptsov · · Score: 1

      They did this first.

  10. Uber's demographics collection paying off... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... literally. I'm would not be at all surprised if they have models that look at the restaurants you dropped off, when you were dropped off (you're probably paying more the later you were dropped off), what stores, etc. They have a good idea what your disposable income is even without aggregating from outside sources.
    Given their history of consumer friendly practices I'd love to see how much they think you're willing to pay when it's 2:00am and you're hailing from the middle of the local bar district.

  11. Uber's business model... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is basically crowd-source scabbing. Why would anyone think they'd treat anyone fairly?

  12. Well what is it you want? by jfdavis668 · · Score: 1

    We want.....a SHRUBBERY!!!!

  13. Better example: by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Someone travelling from a poor neighborhood to a fast food joint when the work shift starts will be asked to pay more than someone going from movie theater to starbucks, because the former might not have any other transportation and can be squeezed dry.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    1. Re:Better example: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What are you doing? I didn't ask to stop here."
      "My homie offered me more money, so I'm picking him up and dropping you at his corner if you can't beat his offer. It would be a shame if someone honked his horn, yelled "this honkey just called me a @#$%^&" and drove off with you standing there in a suit. How does $100 sound?"
      "But it's only 3 more miles. Can't you just finish my trip and then come back for your homie?"
      "Maybe you didn't hear me. How does $150 sound?"

    2. Re:Better example: by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Someone travelling from a poor neighborhood to a fast food joint when the work shift starts will be asked to pay more than someone going from movie theater to starbucks, because the former might not have any other transportation and can be squeezed dry.

      Not really.

      This is Uber admitting they're losing money and charging people more because they think that people use Uber because of an irrational hatred of the taxi industry... erm... I mean loyalty, rather than the fact Uber was the lowest priced option.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    3. Re: Better example: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lol u typed "honkey" but obfuscated "nigg er" in your weird hypothetical scenario

      are you scared of black dudes?

    4. Re:Better example: by quantaman · · Score: 1

      Someone travelling from a poor neighborhood to a fast food joint when the work shift starts will be asked to pay more than someone going from movie theater to starbucks, because the former might not have any other transportation and can be squeezed dry.

      Unlikely, the person in the poor neighbourhood is probably catching public transit (or biking, or walking).

      If anything they're going to going to have trouble catching an Uber at all since the drivers will be making more money shuffling wealthier people back and forth from starbucks.

      --
      I stole this Sig
  14. As if by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did you know if you shuffle the letters around a little UBER becomes RUBE

  15. excuse the sarcasm by desdinova+216 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    isn't the purpose of Taxi regulations is to make sure that the price is consistent regardless of time of day or distance? Oh wait, Uber thinks they're exempt from taxi regulations

    1. Re:excuse the sarcasm by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2

      isn't the purpose of Taxi regulations is to make sure that the price is consistent regardless of time of day or distance?

      That leads to artificial shortages when demand is high, such as rush hour on a cold and rainy day. If the price is allowed to rise, more drivers will be incentivized to provide rides instead of staying home out of the rain.

      With fixed prices, you pay more than the market price when demand is low. You pay less than the market price when demand is high, but you spend a lot longer standing in the rain waiting for an available cab.

    2. Re:excuse the sarcasm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The obvious solution is: keep the price the same for the riders, but pay the drivers less on sunny days.

    3. Re:excuse the sarcasm by thegarbz · · Score: 2

      Uber hasn't ever worked on a pricing structure like that. Why the sarcasm?

      The problem with a fixed prices is it leads to shortages and surplussed as the demand fluctuates.

    4. Re:excuse the sarcasm by hawk · · Score: 1

      No, you missed the point *entirely*.

      The purpose of taxi regulation in US cities has *always* been about being an entry to barrier to protect the cab companies, and to protect the from competition from one another.

      Everything else that it does is a side issue.

      Roughly, the extra costs to the taxi company are worthwhile, as the higher costs keep potential entrants out, allowing participation in cartel/oligopoly profits.

      On top of that, the incumbents are not subject to the usual cheating by other cartel members overproducing--again because of the government mandate.

      There are other examples of this phenomenon, but the taxi model is best known (I'd guess followed by three tier alcohol laws).

      hawk, now putting down his economic professor's hat

    5. Re: excuse the sarcasm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Variable pricing isn't the problem in thus case, although surge pricing has been argued about before.

      In this case the problem is variable price PER PERSON, or per demographic. And guaranteed this will quickly work out to different prices per race. Of course in this case it will probably be white people getting charged more, so it's ok ?

  16. Dickering or haggling... by Archfeld · · Score: 1

    Just as has been occurring for the biggest part of human existence. The idea of a set price and or posted price tags is relatively new to civilization.

    https://www.quora.com/When-dur...

    --
    errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
    1. Re:Dickering or haggling... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except with haggling, if you can't agree on the price you can go to someone else and try again. If the prices everywhere are controlled by one or two companies, you have considerably less choice.

    2. Re:Dickering or haggling... by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      The idea of a set price and or posted price tags is relatively new to civilization.

      So is penicillin. What's your point? Innovations are new, and therefore we should undo them whenever they are in the way of corporate profits?

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    3. Re:Dickering or haggling... by Archfeld · · Score: 2

      You do have a point. The corporate world has concentrated production and ownership into far too few hands. When the production of sustenance level items, e.g. food was in the hands of thousands of small producers things were much more robust and stable. I buy much of my food from local producers and the open farmers market, often bartering my labor and skills in the computer industry for goods. I also realize that isn't an option for most people...

      --
      errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
    4. Re:Dickering or haggling... by 1u3hr · · Score: 1

      It's such a fucking pain in the arse when in a third world country, you HAVE to bargain for every single purchase; or get charged the "white man" price -- ten times or more than the local price. Uber is bringing this shit back -- but when I bargain for a bejak in Indonesia; I know how the system works. I also expect I won't get the same price as a local. Uber is exploiting the trust people that an automated system will be fair; so very likely white people will be paying more on average than coloured in many cites under this system. That's sure to go down well once it gets known. And even if it isn't how it actually works, an opaque and situational pricing system will be (rightly) assumed to be fucking the customer by default -- cf telecom company charges..

    5. Re:Dickering or haggling... by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      The idea of a set price and or posted price tags is relatively new to civilization.

      Absolutely true! And that shift is a really good thing for tons of reasons.

  17. The SJW Silence is Deafing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "...someone traveling from a wealthy neighborhood to another tony spot might be asked to pay more than another person heading to a poorer part of town..."

    Quite clearly discrimination based on race.

  18. Huh - this is different by bjdevil66 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I honest didn't give a damn about all the weird stuff Uber and its CEO have been doing to various parties. All politics, embarrassments, etc. - don't care... As long as 1) the ride is cheaper, and 2) the drivers are good, that's fine.

    This change, however, strikes a nerve for me personally. It's a combination of Big Brotherly data accumulation and usage against people, along with a heaping helping of, "Screw you, rich boy," shakedown.

    If this is the way data collection is going, and how it'll be used, then THIS kind of abuse of people's wallets may finally be what wakes up the average Joe as to why privacy still matters.

    1. Re:Huh - this is different by mjwx · · Score: 1

      I honest didn't give a damn about all the weird stuff Uber and its CEO have been doing to various parties. All politics, embarrassments, etc. - don't care... As long as 1) the ride is cheaper, and 2) the drivers are good, that's fine.

      Lets stop pretending you gave a shit about point number 2.

      I've been in enough Ubers to realise that most of them drive worse than 3rd world taxi drivers. People only went with Uber because it was cheaper. If it is no longer cheaper, they will no longer have customers.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    2. Re:Huh - this is different by PvtVoid · · Score: 1

      This change, however, strikes a nerve for me personally. It's a combination of Big Brotherly data accumulation and usage against people, along with a heaping helping of, "Screw you, rich boy," shakedown.

      If this is the way data collection is going, and how it'll be used, then THIS kind of abuse of people's wallets may finally be what wakes up the average Joe as to why privacy still matters.

      Word, Bro. Fuck over poor people? Awesome, that's capitalism. Suck it up, snowflake. But fuck over the rich bros? Man, that should be a wakeup call to everybody.

    3. Re: Huh - this is different by doomday · · Score: 1

      This is the line for you? Sexual harassment is cool, stealing business plans who cares, following reporters in god mode ain't no thing, greyballing a-ok, but charging wealthy people more... *oh my, no way*!

    4. Re:Huh - this is different by epine · · Score: 1

      All politics, embarrassments, etc. - don't care... As long as 1) the ride is cheaper, and 2) the drivers are good, that's fine.

      Some hairy chimp expressed pretty much exactly this attitude around a campfire 80,000 years ago, and then genius social engineer—this was before the law of unintended consequence—pulled eternal damnation out of his ass, and it's been fucking hell ever since.

  19. Anyone remember Church ride-sharing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uber started off as a.non-commercial ride.share that even non-insured and non-licensed motorists and public vehicular travelers can partake on the Uber program.

    Now Uber is registered in many jurisdictions as a goddamn taxi.

    wooosh.

  20. no different than any other industry, eg airlines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no fan of uber, but i'm not sure why people are making a fuss here.

    for example, airlines have been doing this (legally) for years.

    and lots of other industries charge you more depending on who/where/when. my local toll road has dynamic pricing. the local sports team charges more for premium tickets. the movie theater charges more for friday night shows. car dealerships certainly try to squeeze out more revenue. etc, etc.

    you want a predictable price, call a (regulated) cab.

  21. Amazon does this with in-demand items... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and it's stupid as shit. They'll start jacking up the price of items if inventory volume is low.

    The price could end up well above MSRP until it suddenly drops when inventory is restocked.

    (Like hell I'm paying an extra 25% for a DOCSIS 3.0 modem.)

    1. Re:Amazon does this with in-demand items... by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      so.. it has the desired effect - budget concious customers hold off until the price drops, and those who really need the items right now can still get them albeit at a higher cost. Would you rather they keep the price constant and run out and then no one can get the item at any price for a while?

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    2. Re:Amazon does this with in-demand items... by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      (Like hell I'm paying an extra 25% for a DOCSIS 3.0 modem.)

      This is exactly how markets are supposed to work. If there is a temporary shortage, the price should go up so that people with an urgent need can get what they want, while people (like you) that are willing to wait get lower prices.

    3. Re:Amazon does this with in-demand items... by gnasher719 · · Score: 2

      This is exactly how markets are supposed to work. If there is a temporary shortage, the price should go up so that people with an urgent need can get what they want, while people (like you) that are willing to wait get lower prices.

      I will give you a nice example how I saw the market working. A dozen years ago, the drivers driving petrol trucks in Britain went on strike. Huge queues at all petrol stations. One owner of a petrol station decided to take advantage of the situation and doubled his prices. People had to pay, he made a mint.

      Then the strike was over. His petrol station was absolutely empty. It took six weeks until he was bankrupt. And that's how it should work. Gouge me and there will retribution.

    4. Re:Amazon does this with in-demand items... by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Huge queues at all petrol stations. One owner of a petrol station decided to take advantage of the situation and doubled his prices.

      There are plenty of people who would much rather pay double than waste an hour in a queue. These people would be grateful that someone had the sense to price to market.

      People had to pay, he made a mint.

      Except that no one HAD to pay. They could continue to wait in the queues at the other petrol stations. They were just offered the additional option of paying with money rather than time. Since he "made a mint" it is clear that many people preferred than option.

      Then the strike was over. His petrol station was absolutely empty. It took six weeks until he was bankrupt.

      Of course you just made all this up. In the absence of price controls, ALL of the stations would have raised their prices. Feel free to provide a citation to prove me wrong.

    5. Re:Amazon does this with in-demand items... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also gas stations have competitors.
      Once uber has pushed all competitors out of the market, you have no choice to pay 100 dollar for a 3 mile ride, because they know you are rich based on your browser history and bank account information they scraped with their application.

      There won't be other competitors, because they keep reasonable prices for non-rich people, and potential competitors don't have this kind of information, unless facebook or google wants to start a taxi service for rich people undercutting uber.

    6. Re:Amazon does this with in-demand items... by omnichad · · Score: 1

      If the "shortage" was a lean inventory failing to predict demand, then it could just as well be artificial. If it was an industry-wide shortage and not just ordering late from a supplier, it makes sense.

    7. Re:Amazon does this with in-demand items... by toddestan · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of people who would much rather pay double than waste an hour in a queue. These people would be grateful that someone had the sense to price to market.

      Or it could be that no one was willing to pay that price, and his station sat empty. Until that is all the other stations ran out of petrol....

      Except that no one HAD to pay. They could continue to wait in the queues at the other petrol stations. They were just offered the additional option of paying with money rather than time. Since he "made a mint" it is clear that many people preferred than option.

      And people who needed fuel HAD to pay his price, because he was the only station that still had petrol available and they had no other choice but to pay up or do without.

      This is called price gouging, and there are laws against it in many jurisdictions. Even if it's not illegal, many still consider in unethical and people resent being taken advantage of. If a station served mostly locals I could see them taking a pretty big hit once things settled back to normal.

  22. this does NOT explain it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the "gap" between what riders pay and what drivers receive. that was the issue.

    what uber is saying is, they're charging riders more but then KEEPING the extra cash for themselves because they 'need' it.

    greedy fucks. rot in hell.

  23. No you are your own victim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You want to annoint Uber as a false god to rule over you. Like how many Windows users who get "upset", don't do what the free market suggests and put on your walking boots.

    You want a monopoly to treat you generously. It never happens.

    Perhaps instead of selecting a monopoly to rule over you, you price check 3 services and then select the winner?

    ZOMG, I can't do that! That requires EFFORT! How dare you suggest such a thing!!

  24. ok... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    reason #532 to delete Uber

  25. Profiling customers? by JohnSteed1658 · · Score: 1
    So, does this mean that Uber will profile individual accounts to see if its machine learning algorithms predict that someone's less price sensitive, and "should" be charged more than someone else even traveling the same route at the same time?

    I think it is time to take a Lyft :-)

  26. Cant' wait to see amazon do this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    once they put all the retailer brick and motars out of business, they will jack up prices cause who else you gonna buy from. suckers

  27. uber good by anewday1989 · · Score: 0

    Uber! Verygood Cuu du lieu o cung: https://cuudulieuhdd.com/

    --
    Cuu du lieu o cung
  28. What would be the point then? by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    I could just call a cab with proper insurance.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  29. Re:no different than any other industry, eg airlin by Luthair · · Score: 1

    The flaw is that Uber is no different than traditional taxis except it uses a mobile app. Its like 90s patents all over again, tack "on a computer" or "through the internet" to any mundane idea and suddenly its 'novel'.

    Its more like me starting a company for the sky sharing market, where I sell seats on planes that ignore all FAA rules and use highways for landing strips. Don't regulate me bro, I'm innovating.

  30. What if... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ajit Pai worked for Uber?

  31. Wait, how does this work in a Trump era? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wealthy people paying more? No, this will not stand.

  32. Real Life by SeattleLawGuy · · Score: 1

    "...How much you got!?"

    (I think they call this a shake down)

    Yes and no. Uber does not have a monopoly, and people can comparison shop to Lyft or even a taxi or public transit.

    If and when they get caught charging more based on phone battery life, then they should be hanged. Until then, remember that price discrimination on its face isn't actually irrational.

    People have different utility functions. A ride is worth more to one person than to another. And the fact that Uber is not a monopoly means that customers can comparison shop, at least for now. (This will become more of a problem as price-fixing algorithms converge to best).

    The moral problem arises when there is so much discretion that people start using it to discriminate based on things that our morals say it is not okay to discriminate based on--such as race or religion. Similarly, a problem arises if an algorithm accidentally starts doing that.

    For example, if the algorithm charges people more when they are trying to go to church, there could be an issue...

    --
    Real lawyers write in C++
    1. Re:Real Life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For example, if the algorithm charges people more when they are trying to go to church, there could be an issue...

      So who gets to be the arbiter on "things that our morals say it is not okay to discriminate based on"? You?

      What if this church is in a tony part of town? Is that fair, or do they get exempted from the rule? What if it's not a church but a political meeting? Can Uber's ML algorithm discriminate then? What if it's a gay rights meeting? What if it's a gay bar known for holding Tuesday-night meetings on gay rights and community activism? What if it's a straight bar? What if it's Lyft's headquarters?

      Please post your legit qualifiers to a Google Sheets document and I'll have a look at it ASAP.

    2. Re:Real Life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It may be rational of them to try fuck us over. However its also rational for for us to raise our pitchforks and light our torches.

    3. Re:Real Life by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

      Yes and no. Uber does not have a monopoly, and people can comparison shop to Lyft or even a taxi or public transit.

      Except there are places where instead of public transit, they're considering Uber instead. And Uber has decimated the taxi industry (for better or worse) in a lot of places as well.

      Which may have been the whole intention - get a bunch of juicy legislative amendments calling them a ride sharing and not a taxi service, run both public transit and taxis out of town, then jack up the price because you got rid of it all.

      It's not a bad business model, other than the predatory nature. I mean, Chevy did the same in the early 20th century - they bought up all the public tram lines and killed them all so people would buy cars instead (and the tram lines will fall into disuse so no one could re-start the service).

  33. Taxi vs Uber/Lyft by walterhpdx · · Score: 1

    We live about 18 miles from a major airport. Taxis cost about $52 one way. Uber/Lyft each come in at about $29-$32 one way. I'm actually okay with paying around $40, as I think the taxi is a bit on the higher side, but Uber/Lyft is on the lower side.

  34. Drivers Take the Heat by jasnw · · Score: 2

    Uber has learned what airlines have long known - you can screw the customer over at will and with little fear of retribution because you're not the one at the pointy end of the customer-interface spear. Gate agents and check-in agents take 90% of the heat for airline behavior, and Uber drivers, who aren't getting any of the extra cash, will take the heat for the Uber higher-ups who make the policy, set the prices, and rake in the cash. Capitalism, gotta love it.

    1. Re:Drivers Take the Heat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      What would be the point to slaves otherwise?

  35. Yes, price discrimination is third world. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yes, price discrimination is third world.

    That was one reason we tried to eliminate/reduce it in America. It is why car dealers are so reviled - because they have always fought to keep price discrimination, which heavily favors the seller, as they have the overwhelming information advantage, and cars for many are a necessity.

    Even pricing boosts the economy because it eliminates the friction costs of bargaining.

    Instead of importing your bad third world ideas to America, why don't you go back to your namesake shithole? You seem to prefer the corrupt, polluted, fascist third world like Chyna, so go the fuck back already and leave America to real Americans.

    1. Re:Yes, price discrimination is third world. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Idiots like you make people steer clear of your precious 'US, Fuck yeah!'

    2. Re:Yes, price discrimination is third world. by asylumx · · Score: 1

      Did you really spell it "Chyna"?? Is that pure ignorance or is it supposed to be some kind of insult?

      Seriously, all you had to do was stop typing after you said "the friction costs of bargaining." and this would have been considered a meaningful contribution to the conversation, but instead you had to go on to reveal your racist & xenophobic side instead and alienate most of your readers.

      It's sad I almost agreed with you until that point. I just recently visited India and I found it interesting how so many things are negotiable there. The prices change mostly based on how good you are at negotiating. I mean, they certainly start a lot higher if you're obviously not from around there, and I stood out like a sore thumb so all my prices started out exponentially higher than what anyone else paid. I was lucky to have some friends who were local and had skills with this kind of negotiating because many (most?) Americans, myself included, do not have much practice haggling so when we come to those few points in our lives in America -- like buying a car, salary for a new job, houses -- we tend to rely on some kind of mechanism and think/hope that we are protected by local laws or regulations on pricing.

      So bringing this back to Uber, I don't entirely blame them for wanting to maximize upon their customers, however in our society that will be seen very quickly as 'price discrimination' (as parent & GP called it) and shunned. Here, those price differences will cause customers to feel cheated and trust will be broken. Best case, another firm will use this as an opportunity to showcase their consistent pricing and take those customers. Worst case, it will end up being a lawsuit of some kind. Either way, Uber has already had enough bad press lately, they should probably be a bit careful not to cause more self-inflicted wounds like this.

  36. Uber really is the next gen company by MatiasKiviniemi · · Score: 1

    Wow, no company ever went from "price renegade challenger" to "price gouging incubent" that fast.. Uber is probably right that it's possible jack up the profits that way but inflated margins means more money on the table. And people will notice that shit. Next step would be to limit competition through lobbying..

    1. Re:Uber really is the next gen company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quite right.

  37. Uber - as a job, naaaa by buss_error · · Score: 1, Troll

    I kind of lilked Uber when I was too sick to drive myself to the doctor's appointments. The drivers were usually pretty willing to give me an extra hand. Then I noticed something on my home LAN reports. A lot of connections to a HTTPS address I didn't recognize from my phone. A look up of the domain name came back with a private registration, and the IP addresses were allocated to large ISPs without sub-allocations. The certificate details weren't too helpful either.

    So I started deleting apps from my phone. When I deleted Uber, and did a bare metal reload, those connections stopped. Since I didn't do a bare metal reload before deleting everything else, I can't say Uber was the cause. But SOMEONE was sure wanting to know something fairly often - twice to four times an hour.

    Aside from the fact we already know from other reports that Uber likes to slurp data, and aside from avoiding rules largely placed as protectionism for Taxi services, I found that Uber did kinda meet my needs.

    But not putting aside other considerations, I think Uber Corporation is being evil.

    --
    Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
    1. Re:Uber - as a job, naaaa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But SOMEONE was sure wanting to know something fairly often - twice to four times an hour.

      Smartphone == SPYWARE!

  38. Uber's sound as it loses billions more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uber loses money on every single taxi ride.

    It is not a "disrupter", the proper words to describe Uber business model are:

    1. Tax and regulatory evader.
    2. Money loser.
    3. Monopoly dreamer.

    I refuse to use Uber, ever. If you can't follow the laws in all the countries like everyone else.

    In a way, I am losing out because I could be getting the free subsidy on rides from their shareholders while it lasts.

    I don't think Uber will fare too well once its has to make money. Things will implode rather quickly for the company at that point.

  39. Re: Just drive and collect your check by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like we need to crowd source this asap!!!

  40. Isolated areas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It may be far off in the future, but this could create areas which it could be just too expensive to reach for people with less money. A new kind of a way to segregate.

  41. Uber knows *you* as well as the neighborhoods by EmilioSandoz · · Score: 2

    Why stop at setting fares based on "how much *groups* of customers are willing to shell out "? Uber has a personal relationship with you, don't they? So they can experiment with your *personal* willingness to pay ... if you are a regular customer, they can keep upping your price a little bit, then do it a little more at rush hour to see how likely you are to accept high rates under stressful conditions. Come to think of it, maybe they can figure out a way to get your heart rate from your smart watch to get an even better read on your state of mind. My Libertarian friends will probably still say that the market will sort it out. Free foxes in free hen houses! But maybe we can save everybody a lot of grief by reigning in a company that has shown so many times that it will do whatever it can get away with.

  42. Awesome by easyTree · · Score: 1

    I could do with some free cash after a ride.

  43. Couldn't drivers just... exclude some zones? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like if they would get less from poor neighborhood, couldn't they refuse fares coming from there and only accept the fares coming from wealthier neighborhood?

  44. Is Uber a taxi service? by HolgerHoefling · · Score: 1

    This sounds like a really dangerous strategy for me. Part of Uber's business model (that has come under legal threat in several countries already) has been to portray themselves as a service that, for a fee, brings customers and independently operating drivers together. With this new pricing however, it sounds more like they are offering the service of transportation to the customer and subcontracting it out to particular drivers. This is not semantics - i has potentially huge legal ramifications. If Uber is seen to be the party that takes the largest share of business decisions here - e.g. pricing - and the drivers really have little or no freedom to operate independently, then drivers could be considered employees and Uber a regular taxi company - with all the regulation this implies - including fixed rates and potentially also the need to purchase permits from local municipalities. The original way of merely being a platform for passengers and drivers basically precludes Uber from optimizing the pricing - as this is not their job. They could offer a platform to drivers to only suggest potential prices to charge to drivers - and then taking a fee for this suggestion service. This would allow them to still function as only an intermediary. But this does not seem to be what they are doing. I think this is a very desperate move that could result in a lot of legal problems and potentially a threat for the entire business model.

  45. This is a BIG DOWN from Uber by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    God have mercy, as I will never use them again. Live long my new electric scooter.

  46. =Progressive Tax system by CRidpath · · Score: 1

    What you are willing to pay? Or what you are able to pay. This sounds like a progressive tax system to me...I already get screwed on my taxes, now I have to pay more because I make more?

  47. The whole story many not be even here by ruir · · Score: 1

    I have used Uber when I was sick.a lot around at the end of the year.
    This week I had too training events where I wanted to arrive on time and without worries, and I got Uber - the prices were more expensive than they should be.
    From that and this notice, I think Uber is also penalising more frequent users, from them to subsidise lower prices to attract new users.
    Is it a good strategy? I often used Uber because the prices were attractive; if suddenly they are the double, I will start using more my car.
    As a brief example, today I went by Uber to a training conference, the price was a bit steeper than usual; returned by tube. If the price was slightly low, I may had not take the trouble to return by tube, and Uber anecdotally would have had a little more profit.

  48. What a joke by thunderclees · · Score: 1

    What a joke, Uber gets caught committing fraud and so says it meant to do that while screwing both employees and customers.

    “Jokes? There are no jokes. The truth is the funniest joke of all.”
    - Cassius Clay as Muhammad Ali

  49. Uber will only get my money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uber will only get my money. if they are the cheapest or if they are the only cab company available. I get the Uber bid then I call my local cab company and I go with the cheapest.

  50. When will grocery stores... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    start charging more for milk depending on the time of day and demand? Will they look at your shoes and charge you more?

  51. Re:no different than any other industry, eg airlin by omnichad · · Score: 1

    Uber is no different than traditional taxis

    Their drivers can't just pick random people up off the street. They have to be dispatched through the app. That makes them more like a limo service than taxi service. Any hired car service but a taxi would be an apt comparison, but I don't see the taxi connection.

  52. it's been liks this for thousands of years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only in the US that (gullible) buyers would just take out the plastic and pay whatever the sellers ask. If you've ever visited other countries (China, Mid-east, even Europe), you would know that those street vendors would look at you, and make up a price, just for you! If you look like a tourist, they would ask you to pay more! Uber, airlines, Amazon are just making it at massive scale. BTW, it has been like this for thousands of yours.

  53. Another reason never to use Uber by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 1

    This is just another one of the many reasons I'll avoid Uber. Unless I'm desperate, I won't use them, and unfortunately, if I'm desperate their algorithms will probably fuck me extra hard in my time of need. Thanks, Uber.

    Die, Uber, die. (That just means "The Uber, the", as Sideshow Bob will attest.)

    --
    Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
  54. Racial and economic profiling? by HockeyPuck · · Score: 1

    So under this premise Uber could charge more for someone going from Apple's Campus in Cupertino than they would in East Palo Alto for going the same time/distance?

    We're nolonger in an age where a ride is based on time and distance, but on your economic standing.

    What about charging more for "dangerous parts of the city"? $5 more for picking someone up in Oakland rather than Atherton (home of the CEOs)?

    Or you could crank it up $10 more if you were going to the airport (bonus if Uber could determine when your flight was and jack up the price if they thought you might be late and needed a ride right now!).

    What about automatic "surge pricing" if you were taking an Uber to the hospital? Surely, you'd be willing to pay an extra $20 if you were in labor?

  55. Another reason to delete the Uber app by fisternipply · · Score: 1

    Just delete these MFers and use Lyft or, god forbit, a taxi. The sooner uber goes bankrupt the better.

  56. Uber was alone before... by WebCowboy · · Score: 1

    ...they are just joining the rest of the world's pricing strategy:

    * airlines set ticket prices largely based on willingness to pay, which is why a short flight between Calgary and Ft.McMurray in Canada full of oil workers costs more than a flight from Canada to Europe or Asia.

    * hotels price their rooms based not only on demand but where their customers are visiting from...Americans often get better Vegas deals than Canadians and Europeans, and room prices go up during conventions so the "special convention rate" looks like a deal even though it is pretty much the same rate as non peak.

    * Microsoft and most other closed source software companies charge higher prices in Europe and North America in isolation of actual demand because of their willingness to pay more in licensing.

    Uber's pricing model was destined to become more complex and opaque...I'm sure bistro math is incorporated somehow at this point. It's like entropy really.

  57. just like BeauHD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this is stoopid.. its the california mentality. Lets take it as far as we can go. Who the fuck cares whom we burn..
    They are not customers, they are fucking cattle willing to line our pockets. Thanks for the memories UBER.
    it was a great idea till u got stoopd.
    they need money, Bullshit.
    another good idea gone down in flames
    greedy bastards..
    Way to go BEAU, ur such a tool

  58. peace of mind by Tom · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Back to the robber baron times.

    People think they are smarter than their grandparents when actually they are so much more dumb that they don't even notice it.

    You see, there is a reason for regulations, for fixed fares, for trade union wages and all that "evil government" stuff. The reason is called peace of mind.

    Sure I can go through life negotiating every small deal, always checking all the prices, always on the edge making sure nobody takes advantages of me while I try to use every opportunity there is. What a stressful way to live your life!

    When you travel the same way multiple times, you learn very fast how much the taxi rate is. If you travel in the same city a lot, you can quickly make reasonable estimates. Because of fixed prices. I can decide to take the taxi to the airport tomorrow, estimating what it will cost me and deciding the saved time is worth it. But when prices change all the time depending on a hundred variables half of which I don't even know, then there is no such calmness. I need to check all the different driving services and compare, and just before booking, not the evening before. Then I need to make sure none of the surge charging or other modifiers changes the price at the last minute.

    Why should I fuck my brain like that to maybe save a few bucks? Why should the driver go to work in the morning with not the slightest clue how much he'll earn today? The slavery to market mechanics sucks the souls out of all the human beings involved in the transaction. You can do business like that when you have machine-to-machine trading, but us humans, for us all of this dealing is not an end in itself, it is just a tiny part of the life we live, and the mental burden, the uncertainty and unpleasant surprises have an effect far stronger than the monetary optimisation effect.

    The "gig economy" is not a new invention. Millions of people throughout the ages lived their lives like that. Short, miserable and poor lives. Nobody ever became rich with gigs. It's just a trick to swindle us out of the health care, unemployment and other social security systems that older generations fought and died for to establish. Everyone pushing this misery ought to be ashamed and beg for forgiveness at the graves of their grand- and grand-grand-parents.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  59. This is a lawsuit waiting to happen... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I simply imagine a woman in an area at night being forced to pay a lot of money to feel safe and think about how Uber is asking to be sued here.

    "It appears that our Machine Learning system has figured out that women not at home at 3 AM are very willing to pay more money to get a ride... especially after our system publishes alerts about rapists in the area" Seems like it wont take much effort to pass a law to make sure that this can't happen. Ahh... Machine Learning... letting machines make decisions when you don't know why they are making them... beautiful.

  60. This is nothing new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Travel companies have been doing this for ages... just a couple months ago, my wife was upset because the price had gone up on a booking she wanted to make... told her to clear her cookies, and lo-and-behold, the original price was back.

  61. Über is ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... a failed experiment. It is time for it to die.

    All the little Silicon Valley sociopaths who are currently employed there will just scurry off to another "disruptive" company -- like cock roaches do when you turn a light on.