there are places that don't have uber but where it is easy and not that expensive to get a cab (i live in one)
― -_- (jim in vancouver), Monday, 26 June 2017 16:57 (eight years ago)
where i live it is inconvenient and expensive to get a cab
― Mordy, Monday, 26 June 2017 16:58 (eight years ago)
and i live 3 min from a major city
― Mordy, Monday, 26 June 2017 16:59 (eight years ago)
i found it kinda hard to get a cab in vancouver when i was there actually (also im moving there in 6 weeks sup jim) like one time we called a cab that never came, took a long time to hail one downtown. and not cheap?
Dr C i think we agree more than let on; im certainly not opposed to regulations on a platform like the one i proposed. the important thing is the platform is open and not proprietary. as for the free entry of labor stuff, we seem to have different conceptions of the labor market. I'm much more concerned about exploitation by bosses than among workers competing fairly. i just don't think taxi wages would be ground down to subsistence if we let ppl enter freely, and i think that your type of thinking can easily fall prey to a fallacy of composition: each occupation can limit entry and raise prices, but when everyone does we've just eroded real wages, with no guarantee that this was done in an equitable way. but I'm open to the idea that protection could be an ok 'theory of the second-best' kinda policy in an otherwise fucked labor market, i just don't know that argument or any evidence for it. i tend to put more weight on consumers (workers are consumers too, after all) and unemployed workers looking for a job who get the ladder pulled up behind them by entrenched workers. I'm not against co-ops but they should exist in a competitive environment, otherwise we've just put lipstick on the monopoly pig
thx mh for the HBR piece, very interesting
― flopson, Monday, 26 June 2017 18:51 (eight years ago)
Hrmmm, well, if you don't think this would damage taxi wages, why? Is it specific to the taxi economy in some way, or is this something you would apply to statutory minimum wages generally? And what constitutes "workers competing fairly"? I mean, my suggestion is that this open platform "name your price" type model is not fair competition, and that workers can end up incredibly exploited or discarded by the market even without "bosses." Any regulated economy at all is going to involve ladders being "pulled up behind" - even at the level of requiring people to have licenses or training in what they do, submitting to government safety inspections in the workplace, maintaining accurate records and paying taxes on time... I mean there are just tons of things that people could save big bucks on if only they didn't have to do them.
This is why I'm not sure you can really separate out the regulation question from the fantasy of liberated workers "competing fairly." Once you add back in all the things that are public goods, which these cities have agreed upon as public goods, it's not going to look that different from a city-run taxi platform connecting drivers to legal cab rides. So maybe just to clarify... in the hypothetical "the city is tearing up everything and starting from scratch" scenario, if they implemented the full package of public-good regulations and requirements on drivers (having insurance, keeping up paperwork/inspections on the vehicle, not logging more than legal hours, keeping to the min/max fares where established etc.) alongside a new, city-run ride-hailing platform, would that be "proprietary," or okay by you?
― ﴿→ ☺ (Doctor Casino), Monday, 26 June 2017 19:18 (eight years ago)
I think one of the main problems I've heard of when it comes to boundary areas, which might be what Mordy is running into, is that licensing doesn't cross city boundaries. If anything, it's yet another argument for consolidation of the governance of metro areas when it comes to shared needs, like transportation, licensing, taxes that contribute to infrastructure, etc
― mh, Monday, 26 June 2017 19:29 (eight years ago)
Are there other industries that we regulate the number of employees in the industry? Of course things like electrical require licensing but afaik there's no hard limit on the number of people who can get licensed - it's just limited by how many apprentices current master/licensed electricians are willing to take on. Why should this be the one industry where govt is allowed to say "we have enough people in this industry to protect the current drivers we are not accepting any more"?
― Mordy, Monday, 26 June 2017 19:37 (eight years ago)
cities regulate the number of cars an area can bear, the number that can be parked in an area, and when and where cars can drive on particular streets. there isn't a cap, as far as I know, in NYC on the number of driving licenses that allow you to drive a cab. there is a hard limit on the number of vehicles used for a particular type of transport.
― mh, Monday, 26 June 2017 19:41 (eight years ago)
ok i understand that taxi driving is qualitatively different than other industries since they're in the business of driving specifically tho maybe worth noting that there's no cap on the number of vehicles my (non-transit related) company is allowed to own and use on the road. we're a small company but there are larger companies with major fleets that afaik are not number capped at all.
― Mordy, Monday, 26 June 2017 19:45 (eight years ago)
more pertinently maybe - are freight companies limited at all re number of trucks they can put on the road?
― Mordy, Monday, 26 June 2017 19:47 (eight years ago)
There are other histories of industries with a limited number of players, just usually the number is 'one' cause it's a utility or other 'natural monopoly.' Sometimes that theory is convenient BS but often it makes total sense, e.g. when Bell argued back in the day that having more than one local phone company was insanity since it meant that two people couldn't necessarily call each other. We were just talking about the contracts awarded to specific companies to build and operate subway lines back in the day. Etc.Things like use-based zoning also effectively limit what kinds of businesses can set up shop, or create entities that do that (e.g. boards that say ''there are enough pollution-creating dry cleaning establishments on Main Street and we don't want another"). Plus there's employment by the government itself, which is an enormous sector of the economy where I can't just hang up my shingle and declare myself a public school principal, even if I think my district is foolish to go with a few large schools instead of many small ones. That's not to say those are all universally good things or that the taxi medallion system is great --- again I'm not sure anybody in this thread has made such a claim --- but it's not wildly unprecedented or really that exceptional.In the context of this thread about Uber though, for me, it's like... if a city wants to scrap its medallion system and replace it with an app platform for any driver who meets requirements x y and z, that makes sense to me. If a city wants to scrap its medallion system and replace it with an app platform, and simultaneously scrap all requirements in the name of free labor and say anybody with a car is a cab driver, that to me would be really strange... but if that's the market their riders and drivers really want, then the most I could probably say is "good luck with that. I bet it's a disaster and look forward to saying I told you so." Uber has preempted both of these scenarios by just ignoring the existing laws on a massive scale, generating a crisis where no one got to have the conversation about what was really desirable before this new player established itself and cultivated a customer/lobbyist base. And now we're arguing within precisely the frame Uber wants and has propagated, where the greatest problem in taxi service is that it's subject to government control at all, and critics of Uber are called upon to justify the regulations rather than Uber having to justify its flouting of them.
― ﴿→ ☺ (Doctor Casino), Monday, 26 June 2017 20:23 (eight years ago)
sorry, definitely repeating myself and maybe losing the thread... new phone makes it too easy to type too much
― ﴿→ ☺ (Doctor Casino), Monday, 26 June 2017 20:28 (eight years ago)
uber is a lawbreaking company but maybe this makes me a reactionary but i think critics should always justify regulations. both things could be true - uber broke the law and also the law was dumb.
― Mordy, Monday, 26 June 2017 20:38 (eight years ago)
that's the thing, we're acting like this is a situation with two sides, but I think we're all in agreement there are some essential things they're just ignoring, and some regulation frameworks that technology is challenging, and there needs to be systematic change
the main point of disagreement, to me, is whether there's an actual, useful business with all of uber's aspects or if they're perpetually fudging the numbers or legalities on one area every time they fall behind in another
― mh, Monday, 26 June 2017 20:43 (eight years ago)
yeah, I kinda think the actual useful form of what they invented/perfected isn't a business at all (because no way does Uber itself do enough to justify its cut of every ride), but a tool that gets incorporated into the regulated cab market. like, to imagine an example without the evil disruptive company angle: in a world where, say, subways didn't come up with maps of themselves, it'd be a useful invention to create maps. like hey this makes this thing way more useful! but once the idea is out there, the logical end point is for the subway system to make maps and post them on the trains; that's more beneficial to society than it being a separate product offered by a private company. in techland, I believe some real world subways have created route-finding and service-update apps modeled on things like HopStop. makes sense to me. I think this might be the common ground between me and flopson - where I get out of the cab is where this flows into additional transformations of all these taxi systems into free-market laboratory experiments in 'independent contractor' economies, which to me seems like a non-sequitur from the discussion of what the app platform has to offer.@ Mordy, re: critics always having to justify regulations - is that really how you mean to put it? everybody prosecuting a murder case has to rejustify the statutes criminalizing murder? if you think it's a bad law, cool, write an op-ed, no laws are final, but it's a high obligation to place on anybody who criticizes criminal conduct. which is what uber wants and why they muddy the conversation by going down this route in the first place, imho.
― ﴿→ ☺ (Doctor Casino), Monday, 26 June 2017 21:08 (eight years ago)
there are true rebels out there who just do whatever they want, probably don't even know or care what the laws are, and just accept getting sued as being part of business. it's a popular stance in executive groups and government branches.
― mh, Monday, 26 June 2017 21:10 (eight years ago)
This doesn't look good (sorry for aesthetic)
https://www.dnalounge.com/backstage/log/2017/06/14.html
― Andrew Farrell, Friday, 30 June 2017 21:40 (eight years ago)
I use Uber Eats much more than I use Uber.
― Jeff, Friday, 30 June 2017 21:49 (eight years ago)
you monster
― mh, Saturday, 1 July 2017 01:19 (eight years ago)
They're the only service one my my favorite sandwich shop uses! Also we have ample public transit.
― Jeff, Saturday, 1 July 2017 01:29 (eight years ago)
heh https://www.axios.com/benchmark-capital-sues-travis-kalanick-for-fraud-2471455477.html
― 𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Friday, 11 August 2017 01:36 (eight years ago)
omg so good
― El Tomboto, Friday, 11 August 2017 01:55 (eight years ago)
huh, wonder who owns the rest
― mh, Friday, 11 August 2017 02:07 (eight years ago)
I mean, 10%? 13% is a large enough stake they have them by the balls? is it all a split between founders and venture capital groups all holding less than 10?
― mh, Friday, 11 August 2017 02:08 (eight years ago)
It's enough to screw him over for life, and I will be deeply content.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 11 August 2017 02:10 (eight years ago)
I think uber is a good example of a company with a lot of power, requiring strong ethical guidance, that their users and stakeholders didn't get
the ability of data/tech being able to surface details easily is poorly understood, even among people who deal with software but don't consider that ethical line. I was mentioning Facebook graph search to a coworker today -- not the developer API, but the feature they rolled out in beta to users that opted in. In theory, I can click around and find anyone who has a public profile, any friend who has everything shared, every friend-of-friend or in-network person who hasn't locked down their sharing settings. But people click around a little and don't think about it.
When they had graph search for users, I could go to get dinner, think "hmm do I recognize that waiter from somewhere" and search "men working at <restaurant>" and even refine it to "men working at <restaurant> between age <x> and <y>" or do dumb general things like "women who live in san francisco and like nine inch nails" and it'd give me *everything* that fit within the limits of a person's security setting
that is way beyond the expectations of what any person would consider someone would find. Uber, they had all the data and showed their asses when they put up the data of "hey, here's where the people in the room were earlier today!" freaking people out. They kept doing that shit internally.
― mh, Friday, 11 August 2017 02:24 (eight years ago)
It's weird how Facebook rolled out graph search as a big revolutionary thing, and then it only sort of worked, and now it seems to be basically gone?
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Friday, 11 August 2017 02:27 (eight years ago)
some people realized it did what I outlined and said "uhhh?" and they had enough ethics people to realized they fucked up
― mh, Friday, 11 August 2017 02:31 (eight years ago)
the rolled-out one was still a little too wtf and not monetizable enough
Most people have never had any real training on how to use a search engine. But yeah. People need to understand how this shit really can affect them, and how the back end works, and how analysts (and librarians, and researchers, etc) think.
― El Tomboto, Friday, 11 August 2017 02:33 (eight years ago)
I'm actually thinking now about how to use what you just posted as a way to explain why people *can* trust me and my colleagues at our jobs when I do engagements
― El Tomboto, Friday, 11 August 2017 02:34 (eight years ago)
I still get irrationally angry when people show screenshots where they type questions into Facebook ("what is" or "who" or whatever)
― mh, Friday, 11 August 2017 02:34 (eight years ago)
sorry, meant google
― mh, Friday, 11 August 2017 02:35 (eight years ago)
Whoops!
DO NOT PUBLISH https://t.co/51WK5CgvTv pic.twitter.com/j4iDnN3CiI— noah kulwin (@nkulw) August 11, 2017
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 11 August 2017 18:16 (eight years ago)
mh i used to too but now it can be an effective way to get results on a narrow question that you're pretty sure has been answered by someone who's used the query as their headline - precisely in order to game those people who type questions into google!
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Friday, 11 August 2017 21:09 (eight years ago)
Yeah, that is true, and if you’re looking for question/answer format and get a site like Quora you may be in luck
but you have to realize if I type “who is the king of Spain?” I am looking for pages where people have asked this exact question, not searching for a fact and “king of Spain” or “king spain” or “Spanish king” is a more ‘proper’ search
Medical stuff or social concerns are odious offenders because “is x group racist” won’t give you a list of beliefs of that group, but places where people have a vested interest in answering that question
― mh, Saturday, 12 August 2017 22:47 (eight years ago)
This seems bonkers:
https://amp.ft.com/content/0ab7c891-5d3c-37ae-abbd-13a356611477
Uber plans go raise money from a share sale but can't find anyone to buy in at the current notional value so will offer a discount. The actual value of the shares (ie what anyone will pay for them) is being treated as a special offer in order to pretend that the on-paper value is real, which it obviously isn't.
― Wag1 Shree Rajneesh (ShariVari), Wednesday, 23 August 2017 16:32 (eight years ago)
alphaville is great at roasting uber
― 𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Wednesday, 23 August 2017 17:02 (eight years ago)
and roasting bitcoin
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 23 August 2017 18:16 (eight years ago)
Mmmm slow roasted bitcoin
Just falls off the bone
― As an ilxor, I am uncompromising (El Tomboto), Wednesday, 23 August 2017 21:42 (eight years ago)
Bitmaster
― jk rowling obituary thread (darraghmac), Wednesday, 23 August 2017 22:01 (eight years ago)
Uber's licence for London has been revoked.
“Uber’s approach and conduct demonstrate a lack of corporate responsibility”
― Wag1 Shree Rajneesh (ShariVari), Friday, 22 September 2017 10:15 (eight years ago)
i'm sure this is just a slap on the wrist, i doubt the state will really stand up to a massive company like this, but perhaps i'm wrong.
― Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Friday, 22 September 2017 10:25 (eight years ago)
It's competing special interests so taxi drivers / Addison Lee vs Uber so i don't think there's a clear long-term winner on that front.
― Wag1 Shree Rajneesh (ShariVari), Friday, 22 September 2017 10:28 (eight years ago)
don't have a lot of sympathy for black cabs and their prices but ideally there would be a company like uber that's more ethical. i use uber a lot - don't feel particularly proud of it - i find the conversations i've had with the drivers genuinely one of the best things about it, on several occasions it's been my first experience meeting a person from the given country, on many, many other occasions have just had really interesting chats. i get the impression that the actual setup works well for people, they can work as often as they want, pick their hours etc, that kind of thing seems appealing, but i'm not saying it's a great job or something. equally i know a lot of them are working 15/16 hours a day.
― Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Friday, 22 September 2017 10:36 (eight years ago)
what i mean is the idea of opening up driving work for people is a good one, just make it fair.
― Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Friday, 22 September 2017 10:37 (eight years ago)
Twitter responses some real dregs of humanity shit across the board - may have to stop paying my Internet licence.
― nashwan, Friday, 22 September 2017 10:42 (eight years ago)
There is a Goldline app btw. I use it. And if you have questions you can call and talk to somebody.
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Friday, 22 September 2017 11:22 (eight years ago)
IGWB criticises TfL
James Farrar, co-claimant in landmark employment tribunal decision against Uber and chair of the Independent Workers' Union of Great Britain's (IWGB) United Private Hire Drivers (UPHD) branch said:"This is a devastating blow for 30,000 Londoners who now face losing their job and being saddled with unmanageable vehicle related debt.To strip Uber of it's license after five years of laissez faire regulation is a testament to a systemic failure at TfL. Rather than banish Uber, TfL should have strengthened its regulatory oversight, curbed runaway licensing and protected the worker rights of drivers. The Mayor must call for an urgent independent review of TfL to identify the causes of failure and prevent something like this from ever happening again."
"This is a devastating blow for 30,000 Londoners who now face losing their job and being saddled with unmanageable vehicle related debt.To strip Uber of it's license after five years of laissez faire regulation is a testament to a systemic failure at TfL. Rather than banish Uber, TfL should have strengthened its regulatory oversight, curbed runaway licensing and protected the worker rights of drivers. The Mayor must call for an urgent independent review of TfL to identify the causes of failure and prevent something like this from ever happening again."
― soref, Friday, 22 September 2017 12:26 (eight years ago)
IWGB even
― soref, Friday, 22 September 2017 12:27 (eight years ago)