it's so irritating, instead of taking cars *off* the street in SF you have all these people driving their cars in from out-of-town to make money, resulting in several thousand more cars on the street than pre-uber, and they don't know how to drive in the city, they double-park everywhere (even in intersections!), it drives me up the fucking wall
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 19:08 (eight years ago)
tbf eventually the city will have to spend all its money maintaining local streets due to the extra wear, and when the people go to drive home the bridges will collapse from lack of maintenance
― mh, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 19:09 (eight years ago)
why would I not always pick the cheapest/closest driver?
the cheapest will often not be the closest that's the point. let's say you're far from second nearest cab, nearest guy can charge you more. drivers see each other on the map, gives them incentive to spread out
i agree ratings would have to be normalized. could be done by an intermediary or in-house
― flopson, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 19:14 (eight years ago)
so they have a race to evaluate a distance number, your location, maybe your destination, and provide a quote for rate?
you might have a future in the gamification of commerce
― mh, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 19:20 (eight years ago)
drivers probably know those numbers quite well. but an app could come up with a preliminary fare which they could scale by a factor. also, you laugh but in most of the world cab fares are negotiated by drivers on the spot!
― flopson, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 19:37 (eight years ago)
in most of the world cab fares are negotiated by drivers on the spot!
yup, and this never bothered me tbh
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 19:40 (eight years ago)
prices set by bosses who take a cut even though they offer nothing. my idea = fuck them, make an open platform, let drivers set their own rates competitively and keep all the money
― flopson, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 19:42 (eight years ago)
does uber or any of the others require a destination be entered before you can request a ride?
I understand where it'd be useful -- some drivers wouldn't want to leave an area, or go too far -- but it opens a lot of problems
― mh, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 19:53 (eight years ago)
it didn't used to but does now ya
― flopson, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 19:54 (eight years ago)
I guess it could fuzz the location and just give a general neighborhood for a drop-off point but I think there are a lot of reasons why you'd only want your driver to get your actual destination
― mh, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 19:55 (eight years ago)
like I could see someone I was stalking take out a phone to request a ride, pull the driver one up on my phone, and be pretty sure I know where they live
― mh, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 19:56 (eight years ago)
ok so it garbles it a bit
― flopson, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 20:06 (eight years ago)
I would say something about drivers just always declining to take people to ethnic neighborhoods but outside of public transportation, people pull this all the time already
― mh, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 20:09 (eight years ago)
are uber drivers or can drivers forced to take rides? seems awkward in any set up
off the dome one way to incentivize is having drivers' acceptance rate as part of rating? I'll think about it
― flopson, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 20:19 (eight years ago)
that is part of regulation of private transportation in many locales, yes
which is another thing uber gets around by not being a licensed taxi service or w/e
here's Chicago's page on taxi regulation:https://www.cityofchicago.org/city/en/depts/bacp/supp_info/2012_passenger_information.html
― mh, Wednesday, 21 June 2017 20:22 (eight years ago)
In NYC I don't see how uber and the others survive when via is literally less than half the cost in most situations
― calstars, Thursday, 22 June 2017 01:12 (eight years ago)
rideaustin is leading the way there. they're a non profit. they're doing great, but they're in a weird position: market with a lot of potential and uber and lyft are banned.― 𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Wednesday, 21 June 2017 18:34 (yesterday) Permalink
― 𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Wednesday, 21 June 2017 18:34 (yesterday) Permalink
they've come back - https://www.texastribune.org/2017/06/21/rideaustin/
― just sayin, Thursday, 22 June 2017 01:55 (eight years ago)
Ooof
― 𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Thursday, 22 June 2017 04:27 (eight years ago)
wtf flopson itt
― El Tomboto, Thursday, 22 June 2017 04:40 (eight years ago)
one semester of micro ain't the GUT bruh
― El Tomboto, Thursday, 22 June 2017 04:41 (eight years ago)
what's GUT
― flopson, Thursday, 22 June 2017 04:54 (eight years ago)
http://www.theunrealtimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/grand-unified-theory.jpg
― conrad, Thursday, 22 June 2017 08:25 (eight years ago)
I don't disagree with this idea though
Government should run the platform btw
― El Tomboto, Thursday, 22 June 2017 12:45 (eight years ago)
It can be called "meters"
― El Tomboto, Thursday, 22 June 2017 12:46 (eight years ago)
When you open the meters app it asks you for a number, it can be called a "hack license number" which you also get from the government, it means you're not a felon and you're competent to drive strangers all around town
― El Tomboto, Thursday, 22 June 2017 13:00 (eight years ago)
It's good but it's lacking a certain race to the bottom.
― Andrew Farrell, Thursday, 22 June 2017 13:05 (eight years ago)
After a year of price gouging, threat cutting, screaming and formal complaints, the government can put a "rate" in the "meters" app and everybody has to abide by it
― El Tomboto, Thursday, 22 June 2017 13:08 (eight years ago)
idk if i'm missing something but in the UK we have GETT which lets you order black cabs from wherever on your phone & it seems fine
― ogmor, Thursday, 22 June 2017 13:13 (eight years ago)
except black cabs cost a small fortune???
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 22 June 2017 13:28 (eight years ago)
also there's hailo? and for minicabs kabbee? a friend of mine used to swear by the latter
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 22 June 2017 13:29 (eight years ago)
think those are all uk-only tho
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 22 June 2017 13:30 (eight years ago)
Well, the UK isn't Silicon Valley, it's not their way to assume that their solutions work everywhere, or try to take over the wait hang on.
― Andrew Farrell, Thursday, 22 June 2017 13:35 (eight years ago)
wait, why did you say 'wtf flops on itt' and 'microeconomics isn't grand unified theory' if you like my idea?? idgi
― flopson, Thursday, 22 June 2017 16:15 (eight years ago)
hailo went out of business in north america in 2014https://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2014/10/14/taxi-app-hailo-pulls-out-north-america/ZybacZCWurM1GuQ5Qy3dwL/story.html
fasten, a russian company, has tried to establish a footing here. it started in boston and went to austin shortly after uber and lyft pulled out. i don't seem to remember boston getting a partyhttp://www.kvue.com/news/local/fasten-fest-celebrating-one-year-in-austin/449992201
― maura, Thursday, 22 June 2017 16:20 (eight years ago)
read the subsequent posts and realize you're being made fun of for reinventing taxis
― a butt groove but for feet (DJP), Thursday, 22 June 2017 16:54 (eight years ago)
No it's v different from taxis in fact
― flopson, Thursday, 22 June 2017 19:04 (eight years ago)
however you're right that it tries to bring us closer to the decentralization under taxis. basically Uber has a better platform than telephone numbers and hailing cabs, but they have a monopoly on that platform. since there's an obvious network externality (drivers and users aren't going to sign up for dozens of different apps) you replace it with an open platform. drivers could form cartels like the previous system, but there would be free entry so they'd always compete with independent drivers
― flopson, Thursday, 22 June 2017 19:20 (eight years ago)
an open platform/api would be ideal, yeah
― mh, Thursday, 22 June 2017 19:22 (eight years ago)
You can't just let anybody drive passengers around. no barriers to entry creates unsustainable conditions for full-time drivers, including people just carpooling or commuting, because of the anarchic congestion situations a couple folks described above. It's not safe and it's not smart. A free platform, overseen by an entity that already has additional oversight systems forcing it to pay attention to customer feedback (we'll call this system "elections") should still require the "hack license number" and set ceilings on the number of "hack licenses" made available, as well as floors and ceilings on pricing.
The advantage of having the cab commissions operate this is that they would have much better data on peak times, availability, what kinds of surge pricing might actually be appropriate, and set rates and issue licenses in a much more reasonable and informed fashion, perhaps even injecting some oh my god transparency into the system. The disadvantage is cab commissions are probably all very terrible at IT.
― El Tomboto, Friday, 23 June 2017 00:04 (eight years ago)
in my ill-informed opinion this is like when subways were all being built and operated by private companies before municipal governments had to step in to actually run them sustainably and safely
― El Tomboto, Friday, 23 June 2017 00:10 (eight years ago)
tombot otm. except that the early subways were actually still more regulated, because they were contracted out to said companies by said municipal governments. it was the late 19th century so of course this was also rife with graft and crooked deals and deaths in construction and more, but the subways got built to the stated requirements of cities. how specific these were i'm not sure, and probably varied - where it had to run, how frequent service had to be, how close the stops had to be together... lots of stuff you could have specified without even getting into the price.
flopson your idea is getting mildly clowned here b/c there are hundreds of posts over the last two years of this thread critiquing uber and the uber model for reasons that aren't really addressed by your new scheme. you've been involved in a bunch of those conversations; fine if you don't agree with all the arguments, but acknowledging them might make your vision seem less ~silicon valley naive~ if you will. the thing is i'd be with you on some version of the uber technology being useful and not evil, for example if it were integrated into a more conventionally regulated taxi market, one that doesn't rely on prices so low the drivers can barely afford to drive the cars (whether through the manipulations of the monopoly tech company or brutal price competition on a wide-open market).
― ﴿→ ☺ (Doctor Casino), Friday, 23 June 2017 04:03 (eight years ago)
ok Doc, forget about the specifics of my idea, it was more of a sketch anyways, as the multiple concessions i made to mh demonstrate. do you at least agree with the desirability of an open platform app to overcome the winner-take-all network externality? regulated however you wish
while you all make good points, i think you and Tom and mh are all to some degree coming up with post-hoc justifications for (pre)existing regulations that created the cartelized pre-Uber taxi industry where a license costs hundreds of thousands of dollars and the market doesn't clear (this was shown by the size of the overall taxi + rideshare market growing like threefold as Uber and Lyft entered cities). it's not clear to me that those regulations were put in place for the noble reasons you attribute to them, or more importantly that they are the most effective in advancing those goals. my guess is that they kind of accrete over time as special interests and lobbyists opportunistically influence legislation. put yourself in the perspective of a policymaker in a city in crisis with urgent need to rip up existing laws and write it up carte blanche; would you really just reimpose the status quo?
going through Tombot's post cuz it was somewhat substantive
no barriers to entry creates unsustainable conditions for full-time drivers, including people just carpooling or commuting, because of the anarchic congestion situations a couple folks described above.
putting congestion aside for 5 sentences, why would free entry create unsustainable conditions for full-time drivers? in my proposal you work for yourself aside from a small maintenance fee for the platform, and take home all the money; you own the capital and the labour. why privilege full-time drivers over prospective drivers (not to mention passengers) who would like to enter the market, in that context? the reason free entry is limited in the current system is that bosses/cartels want the profits generated by restricted supply at the corresponding oligopolistic price. whether they split some of that with drivers or not, surely it's better if we let drivers compete but keep everything. the reason we have minimum wages in wage work is that bosses have monopsony power and can pay low-skill workers below their value to the company; if you euthanise the boss as my proposal does all the value flows directly to the worker herself
traffic: i do have some sympathy with Shakey, and in a world with a free entry open rideshare app congestion pricing (toll roads, etc) would be much more important. again I don't think restrictions on numbers of taxis exist because of congestion concerns; they exist because it creates rents for the special interest, not because they are the best way to manage traffic. congestion pricing is both more equitable and efficient anyways; why should people who don't own cars internalize the cost of traffic through higher fares but not regular drivers? the targeted ad-hoc restriction is not the ideal policy to solve the purported problem
A free platform, overseen by an entity that already has additional oversight systems forcing it to pay attention to customer feedback (we'll call this system "elections") should still require the "hack license number" and set ceilings on the number of "hack licenses" made available, as well as floors and ceilings on pricing.
don't totally understand what this words mean, but why floors and ceilings? the point of my proposal is to take Uber's (baldly disingenuous) claim that its drivers are independent contractors seriously, and therefore to cut Uber out of the picture in the process. are there floors and ceilings for what other independent contractors can charge? if there are, should there be? it's not clear to me why you'd want to do that. current (pre)existing floors were likely influenced by taxi lobbies to increase profits
i don't particularly mind if workers voluntarily form co-ops within the platform. they would just have to compete, which means they would likely need to differentiate themselves along some margin; reliability, safety, nicer cars, good service, something like that
― flopson, Monday, 26 June 2017 02:01 (eight years ago)
I don't think a lot of existing regulations are justified, I think they're outmoded and need major retooling. Most cities, like NYC, with a taxi medallion system should buy them all out at fair market rate, kill the speculation and ridiculous inflation, and come up with new licensing and regulations that fit with the current market state
For what it's worth, when the Harvard Business Review, which is incredibly pro-business, finds major fault, you probably are fucked:https://hbr.org/2017/06/uber-cant-be-fixed-its-time-for-regulators-to-shut-it-down
They make the main points we've missed that pre-arranged rides for hire fit outside of taxi systems and the ability to arrange for-hire rides on an immediate basis are an example of regulation not keeping up with technological capability. Also, the point about Uber complaining about Lyft using non-commercial drivers on an opt-in basis, to the extent they agreed it violated all kinds of legal and ethical issues, followed by them jumping fully into that market is incredibly telling!
― mh, Monday, 26 June 2017 02:32 (eight years ago)
imo if they're independent contractors, they should be commercial drivers and not individuals using this as a pay-for-rideshare thing. if you're actually providing transport as a part or full time job, you need to be regulated
then again, you have the Kochs on the other side (and I have no idea if they've weighed in on this type of transport) who will pay to sponsor bills deregulating all kinds of shit. They're seriously all about pushing to deregulate everything from barber licenses up to and maybe including food safety.
― mh, Monday, 26 June 2017 02:34 (eight years ago)
to some degree coming up with post-hoc justifications for (pre)existing regulations that created the cartelized pre-Uber taxi industry
i understand where you're coming from here, so i do want to re-emphasize (as i think i have upthread but memory is hazy!) that this isn't me trying to say that the existing setup is some wonderland, but rather that, however flawed it might be, it does flow from a public process and is about as 'democratic' as anything else in municipal governance. that of course means "a totally flawed process rife with entrenched interests," sure, but is it really better to just wipe all of it out and assume it was all just there to benefit the entrenched interests? this basically grants the inventor of new apps a kind of retroactive dictatorial power over the law, conceptually: if your invention makes it easy to wreck a regulated market, it's time to go ahead and assume that the regulations were all a scam. as i've said, there is something odious about law-flouting systems just coming in and establishing themselves --- even if many would agree the lawfully-enacted system has flaws! --- because now we're stuck arguing from the premise that the regulated system has to be aggressively defended as some kind of aberration from a free market which is presumed to be the natural and just state of things.
so i think tombot is right to point back to governments: if something like your system were to be set up, it would appropriately be the business of municipalities to decide on adopting the platform, weighing the pros and cons of it versus other interest and needs.
why would free entry create unsustainable conditions for full-time drivers? in my proposal you work for yourself aside from a small maintenance fee for the platform, and take home all the money
many have pointed out, and you've previously acknowledged, that the uberization of the economy, where nobody has a 'job' and everybody is an 'independent contractor' has serious flaws. broadly speaking it is very convenient for consumers, who only pay for services they're using right that second, perhaps not ultimately in the public interest (in the same way that ready access to cheap unfiltered cigarettes is convenient for a smoker), and potentially very bad for workers themselves. like working at a factory but you show up at 9:00 and they're like "oh we're not getting the steel in til 3:00, so don't clock in til then." taxi service obviously has always worked differently than a 9-to-5 but still, aren't there some risks for the workers in this gig/platform model?
like suppose there are a large nubmer of drivers willing to pitch their prices ridiculously low, so low that other people (who might present a better fleet of cars and drivers) can't actually make a living if they lower their prices that low? maybe a bunch of teenagers who aren't thinking about saving for the future, or the wear-and-tear this is going to put on the vehicle long term. or retirees who just like having a little pocket money or someone to talk to, or whatever. the people actually most serious about taxi service and what it costs to make your living in this way and maintain your vehicle could be priced out of the market, especially if some third party (let's call them "floober") steps in to consolidate the cheapie drivers as a bloc, promising them promotional advantages, hyping them under some shared banner ("floober: the fun, cheap ride! when you're using CabApp, choose a Floober driver!") or spamming the platform with clever algorithms or whatever, to basically push the price-undercutting drivers forward. that's great for the price-undercutting drivers but it might not be great for the public at large.
this is maybe another way of picking up your "the reason we have minimum wages in wage work" line. actually i would say "the reason we have minimum wages in wage work" is that without them, some people would be willing to work for less than minimum wage, but that's actually bad for everybody (except bosses, customers, and people who profiteer on poverty, like slumlords and payday lenders).
the reason free entry is limited in the current system is that bosses/cartels want the profits
this is not "the" reason though! this is why i feel like you're not acknowledging that other arguments have been made itt. yes of course they want the profits. but what about all the other things people have said here over two years about what kind of benefits flow from a regulated market? benefits to the riding public as well as to the drivers? in NYC the medallion system is obviously broken and needs a re-do as mh suggests. but it also incorporates a number of regulations which are obviously there out of public interest and cannot be reduced to the scheming of medallion owners to cement their control. you have to use certain models of cars approved for safety. there are maximum hours you can work per week to protect passengers from driver fatigue. the fares are regulated, which means drivers miss out on big payoffs when there might seem a chance to 'surge price' (aka gouge) while the public benefits from not being gouged. drivers have to get drug tests. drivers with too many points on their licenses can be barred from driving. and yes there is this whole 'insurance' thing which is Kind of a Big Deal. bamcquern is still OTM here:
Insurance isn't there for cab customers; it's for people in accidents. Obviously due to the nature of their occupation, insurers would want drivers to have a different class of insurance. This protects not only them, but also anyone they might get in an accident with. I also don't see a problem with stricter licensing for anyone but your average driver, that is, for trailer truck drivers, commercial drivers, taxi drivers, etc. Their jobs revolve around driving, so they should demonstrate to the states they operate in that they can competently perform their jobs, particularly because motor vehicles are a common cause of injury and death.
and here also:
If taxis fail as something benefitting the public as well as lawmakers feel they should, then regulations can be revised, and at that time we can thank uber et al if they've pressured states to improve their regulations (so that more drivers can get on the road, I guess? I don't really give a shit about that. I actually have a lot of antipathy toward the idea), but the costs of deregulation aren't as clear cut as the average price of fares and the average wage of drivers, and unless the cost of ensuring safety and reasonable levels of liability are spiraling out of control due to regulations, you can't convince me that these basic regulatory safeguards are unreasonable.And two years is too short a time to evaluate the outcome of this experiment. Did it take two years for virtually every trolley company in cities across America to be replaced by buses, taxis, private cars, urban sprawl, congestion, and smog? Did it take two years to deindustrialize the Midwest, leaving scars like East St Louis, Detroit, and Gary? The deregulation of the taxi industry isn't as dire as all that, but it's also nontrivial, and it has implications for policy-making in other sectors, eg housing, where airbnb is far more insidious than uber could ever hope to be.
And two years is too short a time to evaluate the outcome of this experiment. Did it take two years for virtually every trolley company in cities across America to be replaced by buses, taxis, private cars, urban sprawl, congestion, and smog? Did it take two years to deindustrialize the Midwest, leaving scars like East St Louis, Detroit, and Gary? The deregulation of the taxi industry isn't as dire as all that, but it's also nontrivial, and it has implications for policy-making in other sectors, eg housing, where airbnb is far more insidious than uber could ever hope to be.
― ﴿→ ☺ (Doctor Casino), Monday, 26 June 2017 15:55 (eight years ago)
I was recently digging into some local history and found this section on public transportation illuminating. Suburban sprawl (glossed over here under the "everyone wants a house" rationale) takes a lot of the blame, but by that point public transport in many areas was under corporate influence
In the 1930s, with the Great Depression reducing the market for personal automobiles, General Motors Corp. made a push to convert all U.S. transit systems to rubber-tired diesel buses. This effort was supported by Congress, which, in 1935, passed the Public Utility Holding Company Act, requiring most power companies to divest themselves of public transit operations. General Motors purchased transit systems across the nation through its subsidiary, National City Lines. They quickly turned around and bought diesel buses from the parent company and discontinued rail service. The rails were abandoned, often paved over in the city streets, although many ended up being salvaged for their steel once World War II began.After the war everyone's first goal was a house of their own. More and more far-flung subdivisions and even new suburbs were built, and because auto ownership was not keeping pace, transit ridership hit a peak. Transit systems in Iowa's ten largest cities carried 105 million riders in 1946. But it was not sustainable. As communities expanded, transit had difficulty meeting all the travel needs efficiently. General Motors was not reinvesting in the bus fleets it owned, it was gearing up to provide massive numbers of automobiles.
After the war everyone's first goal was a house of their own. More and more far-flung subdivisions and even new suburbs were built, and because auto ownership was not keeping pace, transit ridership hit a peak. Transit systems in Iowa's ten largest cities carried 105 million riders in 1946. But it was not sustainable. As communities expanded, transit had difficulty meeting all the travel needs efficiently. General Motors was not reinvesting in the bus fleets it owned, it was gearing up to provide massive numbers of automobiles.
― mh, Monday, 26 June 2017 16:12 (eight years ago)
fwiw the reason power companies owned transportation was that electric streetcars were the largest user of electricity at the time
― mh, Monday, 26 June 2017 16:14 (eight years ago)
i think that the anti-uber argument on regulatory grounds probably has merit but when the current system is so broken as to be actually unworkable, and this new model comes up that i actually like to use and it works and i benefit from, it's v hard for me personally to say "ok let's get rid of the thing that works and go back to the thing that i never got any value out of bc the new thing doesn't follow the very regulatory regime that made the old thing undesirable to use"
― Mordy, Monday, 26 June 2017 16:53 (eight years ago)
literally no one is saying that
― mh, Monday, 26 June 2017 16:54 (eight years ago)
I mean, not here. Even most places with Uber banned have newer things.
I think that Harvard Business Review article makes a good point in acknowledging a lot of things have been changed in the last few years in existing taxi systems, and it's getting masked by uber/lyft existing
― mh, Monday, 26 June 2017 16:56 (eight years ago)