Those happy to defend driver and rider matching service Uber
have been a lot quieter of late. Why that might be is not hard to see: the slew
of complaints about indifferent service, the forced cut in earnings for many of
its drivers, the way it does business and pays its taxes, and the behaviour and
attitude of its management, all have been found wanting recently.
And this has underscored what I’ve been saying for some
time: Uber is not some plucky little start-up, but an aggressive and
well-funded corporate. So it
was no surprise to read “Taxi service
Uber's tax affairs have been referred to HMRC by London's taxi and minicab
regulator Transport for London (TfL) ... The app's Dutch operating firm, Uber
BV, does not pay tax in the UK”.
Nor was it a surprise to
read of a Los Angeles customer “Instead
of taking her home, the driver took her on a nightmare ride to an abandoned
lot—and Uber doesn't seem to care”, or of a New York Uber driver,
who
said to a cancer patient who had to cancel her ride after a bout of
radiotherapy “You are not human ... I
think you deserve what happened to you”.
And it was entirely
predictable to read “The subprime
lending market that plunged America into the Great Recession is back and as unscrupulous
as ever. Instead of mortgages, this time a bubble has formed around auto
loans, and reliably ruthless Uber is in the thick of it. Two ‘partners’ in
Uber's vehicle financing program are under federal investigation, but Uber
hasn't slowed its aggressive marketing campaign to get drivers with bad credit
to sign up for loans”.
But what has really taken the biscuit recently has
been the revelation that Uber’s senior VP of business, Eric Michael, has
floated the idea of “hiring a team of
opposition researchers to dig up dirt on its critics in the media”. He even
had a specific target in mind – Sarah Lacy of Silicon Valley website PandoDaily.
Uber CEO Travis Kalanick was consumed with regret, but
Michael is still in post, which causes the thought to occur that the regret is
that his man got caught opening mouth and inserting boot. He was quick enough
to pretend that the gathering where Michael made his pitch was off the record.
Yes, they invited Arianna Huffington, Michael Wolff and a BuzzFeed editor, and
expected them all to keep schtum.
On top of all that, Kalanick “made the case that he has been miscast as an ideologue and as
insensitive to driver and rider complaints, while in fact he has largely had
his head down building a transformative company that has beat his own and
others’ wildest expectations”. Yeah, right. And who exactly articulated the
sentiment “the competition is an asshole
called Taxi”? That would be you,
Trav.
Does anyone out there
on the libertarian right still want to defend this shower?
You get the feeling that the execs at Uber have never had experience of running a company - or even being behind the tills in a shop - before. It's sixth-form business idea level tit-for-tat.
ReplyDeletePlus if they wanted to smear Sarah lacy, they hardly needed to hire anyone to do it; she seems to be doing a good job herself: http://valleywag.gawker.com/pandodailys-threatening-email-meltdown-1149039909
It's obviously unethical and mean and makes me hate them even more, but is anything the Uber team did illegal?
ReplyDelete