> Those taxi companies that are their “for the poor” routinely wouldn’t go into “poor” neighborhoods or pick minorities up.
There's no reason to replace an already poor service with one that's even worse and requires a smartphone and a bank account, which adds a further layer of discrimination as about 5% of US households don't even have a bank account, much less a credit card, and 24-13% of poorer classes don't have a smartphone [2].
In contrast, a taxi can (at least by law) be used by anyone with cash, and the data about your travel is not available for police or anyone else to abuse [3].
> By definition any company that is using VC funding is pricing their product less than it takes to make it - ie “price dumping”.
IMO, there's a difference between using VC money to provide funds for growth (aka, a high-risk loan) and using VC money to intentionally provide a service at below-cost - five euros for half a hour taxi ride is not sustainable, it won't even pay for the working time of the driver.
> There are already laws about zoning that should keep AirBnB in check.
Yes, now after years and years of issues and complaints. AirBnB could only grow as large as it did by following the "better ask for forgiveness than permission" lifestyle and blatantly breaking all kinds of laws.
Cell phone penetration in the US is above 85%. Cell phone penetration has been higher in developing countries for years.
At least I as a minority don’t have to worry about a taxi cab bypassing me when I take an Uber.
Taxi companies have been breaking laws for decades against discrimination and don’t get me started about the government monopoly in regards to the medallion system in major cities.
> Cell phone penetration in the US is above 85%. Cell phone penetration has been higher in developing countries for years.
Taxis should be available for everyone, not just the 85% that own a smartphone and don't end up banned by the app out of random [1].
That existing taxi companies don't follow up to the regulations is a different problem (and one where the government definitely has to step up), but Uber and friends aren't even required to follow the same rules, that is the whole point of why these kind of services are so dangerous for society!
To repeat myself in a bit more detail: by law and regulations they are available to everyone. Non-discrimination is a criteria in almost all medallion / license contracts, not to mention certain laws (e.g. the ADA [1]).
These laws and regulations are, I admit that, often sparsely enforced and most people don't complain anyway, which makes the problem worse as it isn't quantified and shows up on the statistics that politicians and activist groups use either. A lack of data is the single biggest issue in fighting discrimination!
The solution however is not to promote apps like Uber, to which taxicab regulations do not apply at all (or severely restricted) and which just a few weeks ago entered a multi-million dollar settlement for over 65.000 cases of discrimination because they violated the one law that actually is enforced [2].
Well, we have an existence proof. The government that you wanted to depend on didn’t in fact do it’s job, a private company did. But you believe that the government will get it right next time?
They did not. Uber also got caught discriminating against people.
> But you believe that the government will get it right next time?
I have more faith in government than in private companies which have a massive financial interest in saving the money that compliance with anti-discrimination regulation costs.
There's no reason to replace an already poor service with one that's even worse and requires a smartphone and a bank account, which adds a further layer of discrimination as about 5% of US households don't even have a bank account, much less a credit card, and 24-13% of poorer classes don't have a smartphone [2].
In contrast, a taxi can (at least by law) be used by anyone with cash, and the data about your travel is not available for police or anyone else to abuse [3].
> By definition any company that is using VC funding is pricing their product less than it takes to make it - ie “price dumping”.
IMO, there's a difference between using VC money to provide funds for growth (aka, a high-risk loan) and using VC money to intentionally provide a service at below-cost - five euros for half a hour taxi ride is not sustainable, it won't even pay for the working time of the driver.
> There are already laws about zoning that should keep AirBnB in check.
Yes, now after years and years of issues and complaints. AirBnB could only grow as large as it did by following the "better ask for forgiveness than permission" lifestyle and blatantly breaking all kinds of laws.
[1] https://www.fdic.gov/analysis/household-survey/index.html
[2] https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2021/06/22/digital-div...
[3] https://www.vice.com/en/article/mbqq7y/is-uber-doing-enough-...