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China Crime Transportation

Uber's Terrifying 'Ghost Drivers' Are Freaking Out Passengers in China (qz.com) 81

Several Chinese publications are reporting that "ghost drivers" are frightening Uber passengers into paying for trips they didn't take. Passengers in Tianjin, Qingdao, Chengdu, Beijing, Shanghai and Suzhou have been canceling Uber rides after seeing creepy driver profile pictures pop up in the app. Quartz reports: Passengers using the ride-hailing app in several Chinese cities have reported seeing their requests picked up by drivers with creepy profile photos of zombie faces. According to Chinese news site Sixth Tone, the point of these ghostly profiles is to scare passengers into canceling the trip, so they are fined for a few yuan (less than a dollar), which goes to the driver. Other passengers have reported seeing their rides accepted, but then their trips were "started" by the driver on the app before they even get to the car. These "ghost rides" last less than a minute, with the driver charging customers between 8 and 15 yuan (about 1 to 2 dollars) for a ride that never happened. Calls to the drivers in these cases are never picked up, according to The Paper, a state-owned media. Passengers can however eventually be reimbursed by Uber China if they lodge a complaint.
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Uber's Terrifying 'Ghost Drivers' Are Freaking Out Passengers in China

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  • I thought one of the selling points of Uber was that customers could review the drivers, and so you knew in advance you were getting someone you could trust?
  • Simple Solutions (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Ronin Developer ( 67677 ) on Thursday September 22, 2016 @09:15AM (#52938449)

    to the "ghost rides".

    Modify the Uber app so that the rider has to confirm the start of the ride on their mobile device.

    Reporting of "scary" profile pics should be simple as well - simple snapshot and forward - If proven - the driver takes a hit on their next 5 drives - say $1-2 per drive.

    Problem solved.

    • What is it with people like you and your advocacy of slap-on-the-wrist punishments? This pathetic little punishment won't fix the problem; the solution is to ban these drivers for life once the company finds out that they're doing this. Uber is a private company and has every right to terminate a business relationship with a driver who is willfully harming its business and reputation this way, and absolutely should.

      • by plopez ( 54068 )

        That's called firing people and turns into an employer/employee relationship.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        What is with people on me you and your little slap on the wrist punishments? We should zombify the drivers and send them in their way to inflict even more terror!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Modify the Uber app so that the rider has to confirm the start of the ride on their mobile device

      So what happens when a passenger "forgets" to acknowledge the start of a ride? You'd have to have a system which would let the driver check that the passenger has acknowledge the start of the ride, and then there'll inevitably be issues with people not having a mobile connection to use to send the acknowledgement to Ubers servers.

      • and then there'll inevitably be issues with people not having a mobile connection

        Something tells me if you don't have a mobile connection then you're not going to be upset about having to acknowledge something you need a mobile connection to access in the first place.

    • Modify the Uber app so that the rider has to confirm the start of the ride on their mobile device.

      Suppose the user refuses to confirm the start of the ride to try to get it for free. What do you do then?

      Reporting of "scary" profile pics should be simple as well - simple snapshot and forward - If proven - the driver takes a hit on their next 5 drives - say $1-2 per drive.

      What's to stop people from just being jerks and reporting "scary" photos when it's not true? For example, person A has a grudge against person B and A knows that B drives for Uber so A gets a bunch of his/her friends to report B's photo as "scary".

      Problem solved.

      Maybe not for the reasons I stated but the thought also occurs to me that maybe Uber doesn't want to solve this problem for various reasons. Maybe it's rar

  • People find they can abuse a system for personal monetary gain, so they do.

    There will be solutions to these existing abuses but I suspect that the drivers will be able to devise new ones faster than the Uber developers can mitigate against them.

  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Thursday September 22, 2016 @09:36AM (#52938649) Homepage Journal

    They sure are enterprising.

    [I say this as someone who is Chinese; irony disclaimers apply]

  • Article makes it sound like they are getting spooked because of monsters or something, but they are really just deciding they don't want to ride with a weirdo.
    • The photos don't look scary. They look like they have been stretched using some photo-manipulation software, and just look stupid. The 3rd profile picture just looks completely normal to me. Maybe there is some sort of cultural difference that makes the Chinese people suspicious of these pictures, but to me, it just looks like a 13 year old youtuber screwed around with the photos. It's UNPROFESSIONAL, sure, but I'm not scared. ("I ain't 'fraid of no ghost!")
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Thing is, Chinese people are afraid of ghosts. For real. I'm a European with a Taiwanese partner, and to me they (Chinese people) are shockingly superstitious. Graveyards are to be avoided, if you've even been near a dead person (including a hearse driving past on the street) you'll probably have bad luck for days because a ghost is following you, etc. Just seeing a dead animal is apparently bad luck. Fortune tellers make a fortune (no pun intended) on giving people career and love advice. I can easilly see

  • I sure hope they will lodge the complaint up someone's ass.

  • You can cancel a driver immediately without penalty. If you get a driver you've had before and didn't like or it's a driver with a POS car or a driver with a poor rating that's your opportunity to cancel.

    The ghost drivers that plague me, in a non-US location, are drivers who are faking their locations so the appear to be close but actually aren't. I think they are being ghosts for a different reason, fear that the taxi mafia in this country in cooperation with the corrupt police harass Uber drivers and i

  • Sorry about that; I forgot my makeup and to shave.

  • make 10 fake uber driver profiles with "scary" pictures, collect from all the fake rides you didnt do, count on cultural fear of ghosts to not get complaints.
    China is full of entrepreneurs like that.

    Another example: Shenzhen police started a program rewarding traffic violation recordings from dash cams with straight up cash (something like $5?)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    there are tutorials on chinese social media how to make good money inciting other people to brake traffic laws.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Most people stop being scared of ghosts by the time they're ten.

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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