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EU The Courts Transportation

Uber Is About to Face a Landmark Battle in Europe (fortune.com) 106

In a case which could affect other app-based startups, Uber will seek to convince Europe's top court next week that it is a digital service, not a transport company. The outcome could determine whether app-based startups should be exempt from strict laws meant for regular companies. From a report on Fortune:The European Commission is trying to boost e-commerce, a sector where the EU lags behind Asia and the United States, to drive economic growth and create jobs. The U.S. taxi app, which launched in Europe five years ago, has faced fierce opposition from regular taxi companies and some local authorities, who fear it creates unfair competition because it is not bound by strict local licensing and safety rules. Supporters however say rigid regulatory obligations protect incumbents and hinder the entry of digital startups which offer looser work arrangements to workers in the 28-country European Union looking for more flexibility, albeit without basic rights.
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Uber Is About to Face a Landmark Battle in Europe

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  • Ebay will be called an auction place and have to abide by rules in every town.
    Paypal will be called a bank and have to obey laws.
    Every tech company figures they're semi avoiding laws at least cuz it is new. The motto in tech ask for forgiveness, not ask for permission. If you limit yourself, you might not ever have a good idea to make billions. I've had many ideas that turned into multimillion or multibillion dollar companies, but I didn't do them myself because I didn't have a crew to do them with.
    • Um... so what? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @04:53PM (#53361567)
      these laws and regulations exist for a reason, and it's not to put a stop to everybody's fun. It's because people were being abused.

      If you let people ignore laws because you're changing nomenclature then there is no law. If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it's a duck.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Thanks for that. As much fun as certain... generations have from doing everything via smartphone, taxi companies are Good For Society (tm). What if you can't use a smartphone? You need to call a taxi... but not if ride-shares (so called) have put them out of business. What if you're elderly? What if you have a neural disorder?
        Completely aside from discrimination and so on.

        • by Dahamma ( 304068 )

          So you are arguing that ride share services (which yes, let's admit it, are totally the new taxis) should be suppressed because they are so much better for 98% of the population, but may make it harder for the other 2%?

          So why not just throw away they rest of the outdated taxi regulations and let people call a number to request an Uber? I'm sure they'd be happy to oblige that 2% (in reality, it's way less than that - probably a fraction of a percent) in order to get government regulators off their backs.

          • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @06:47PM (#53362113)
            nice straw man, btw. What part of Uber is a ride share service? Uber is actively seeking drivers with the same techniques companies use to find employees. They're also treating those drivers exactly like employees. Crucially by controlling how much they charge and punishing them for refusing low paying rides. There are other ways though.

            If they're going to treat people like employees when it's to their advantage they're also going to treat them like employees when it's to the drivers advantage. People literally died for those protections. In China and South America they're still dying. WTF is wrong with you that you'd turn a blind eye to that?
            • by Dahamma ( 304068 )

              What part of Uber is a ride share service?

              What part of "ride share services (which yes, let's admit it, are totally the new taxis)" did you not get?

              Actually, I TOTALLY AGREE that Uber is a transportation company and not a digital services company. My argument is that the current regulations on "transportation companies" are absurd.

              I a not "pro Uber" per se - but I do agree some additional regulation is in order. But I also have several friends who are Uber drivers who are very happy with it and yet would never have been able to be taxi drivers du

              • because Uber is paying way more than it needs to for it's drivers in order to establish itself. They're doing that with investor capital that will eventually dry up. If the necessary legal precedence is established by then expect your friends pay to be about 1/2 - 1/3 minimum wage. Also expect minimum wage laws to be irrelevant. I know it's a popular talking point that prices will go down when that happens, but ask yourself this: once Uber has established a price point why would they lower it? Competition?
                • by Dahamma ( 304068 )

                  You don't actually understand how Uber works, do you? Have you ever even used it?

                  Uber is paying way more than it needs to for it's drivers in order to establish itself. They're doing that with investor capital that will eventually dry up. If the necessary legal precedence is established by then expect your friends pay to be about 1/2 - 1/3 minimum wage

                  The rates for Uber vary based on demand in a specific area. So when there aren't enough drivers on the road, the rate goes up and more drivers get out there. When the rate goes down to where it's not worth it, some drivers stop.

                  Almost no Uber driver does it as their primary/full time job (I saw a stat that it was something like 90% of drivers have another job, and 70% have a full time job other than Uber). People use it to

          • Listen I know with Trump and everything equality seems to be going out of style, but it is a pretty shitty society that turns their backs on that 2%. In fact that is pretty much the gold standard of how well a society treats its members. And anyway if you count all the people who may be raped or attached in some other way it is far higher than 2%.
            • attacked*
            • by Dahamma ( 304068 )

              Who's turning their back? I'm encouraging that the government allow Uber to let people call in and schedule rides. I think that would be a great service, and in the VAST majority of areas where that "2%" lives, would result in faster service.

              • The 2% doesn't just consist of people living in certain areas, it also consists of people who are physically disabled who cannot use a regular vehicle. Currently most taxi services must provide these services, but Uber does not.
                • by kuzb ( 724081 )
                  Totally solvable problem. Just because it doesn't exist does not mean it can't be solved. It just makes you look like an idiot to voice this as an unsolvable problem.
                • by Dahamma ( 304068 )

                  Of COURSE it's about people in "certain areas". Te Urban areas are the only places this is even an issue. In the suburbs and even more the rural areas Uber is a godsend for those not having their own means of transportation.

                  Where do you live? Have you ever tried to get a cab in the semi-rural Midwest? I have. It's nigh-impossible, while getting an Uber still takes make 10-15 minutes since the driver doesn't have to be a part of a big taxi company.

          • So you are arguing that ride share services (which yes, let's admit it, are totally the new taxis) should be suppressed because they are so much better for 98% of the population, but may make it harder for the other 2%?

            Largely we're not talking about Uber's customers, we're talking about Uber's employees.

            ...and yes, Uber's drivers are obviously Uber's employees.

            When I buy a box on Amazon via their app, the employees that package and ship that box to me work under local labour laws. Uber needs to do

        • You need to call a taxi... but not if ride-shares (so called) have put them out of business.

          The reason you can't use a phone to order an Uber, is because in many jurisdictions, that is illegal. Once the taxis are out of business, those laws can be repealed.

          What if you're elderly? What if you have a neural disorder?

          What if an elderly or disabled person needs a ride on a busy rainy night, but there are no rides available because of government imposed fix prices that don't incentivize additional drivers to go out and provide rides?

          What if that elderly person needs to eat? Should we require grocery stores to be licensed, and provide food at fixed prices to

          • Yeah, I just spent a week in New York. I saw people trying to hail taxis left and right. I never waited more than ten minutes for an Uber, and usually less than five. I got picked up. They still had their arms out.
          • You need to call a taxi... but not if ride-shares (so called) have put them out of business.

            The reason you can't use a phone to order an Uber, is because in many jurisdictions, that is illegal. Once the taxis are out of business, those laws can be repealed.

            That doesn't guarantee it will happen though. Running phone lines is expensive, and that eats into profit. Uber's business model is one of cherry-picking profitable business, not of getting full coverage; whereas one of the main points about regulated taxi and private hire car services is that you can mandate that a license holder has to cater for different classes of passenger. That means that a medium-to-large taxi firm must have a certain percentage of accessible vehicles, and now practically all black c

        • by kuzb ( 724081 )
          So set up an uber dispatch. You're acting like this is an unsolvable problem.
      • by Dahamma ( 304068 )

        Yes, in some cases it was because people were being abused. In many other cases it's because lobbyists of the oligopolies want to prevent competition or local governments can't figure out how to maximize their taxes on it.

        If you disagree, please explain how Uber has seriously harmed anyone other than the outdated Taxi companies. It's frankly absurd that a person would need government permission just to accept money to drive another person where they want to go.

        • There's a reasonable argument that there's a right number of Taxis. Too few and people don't get a proper service. Too many and there's congestion. Too many empty taxis waiting round.

          Free marketers would say that the market would find the right level. But that's religion, not reality. A free market finds A level, not necessarily the right level. A free market would normally end up with too many taxis, and poverty wages as they all compete for few jobs at low rates. You can see that happening in parts of the

          • There's a reasonable argument that there's a right number of Taxis.

            No, I don't think there is. The number is very fluid. It changes from minute to minute and from location to location, and from person to person. I personally have no idea how you'd go about figuring it out. I don't even know how you'd decide one value is better than another because that's a judgement call, not an objective fact.

            Free marketers would say that the market would find the right level. But that's religion, not reality. A free market finds A level, not necessarily the right level.

            It's not religion any more than believing a wise and well informed third party can deduce the right value.

            Somehow we need to come up with the number of available taxis right now. I'm

            • No surprise that a free marketer would comment to say what I suggested they would say. Confident that their religion is right.

              • by Dahamma ( 304068 )

                And yet his argument is well thought out and totally reasonable. while your argument provides almost no actual evidence supporting your opinion. Who's the one pushing the "religion" in this case?

                I'd argue that someone magically believing that setting BOTH arbitrary limits on supply AND pricing is the one bowing to a fake religion...

                • ...nor 2 free market religionists.

                  • by Dahamma ( 304068 )

                    When you can't attack the argument, attack the person. Is ad hominem all you have?

                    • I already made the argument in the opening post, including predicting disagreement by free marketers. There's nothing more to say other than what I already did.

                    • by Dahamma ( 304068 )

                      Hilarious. Your original argument WAS THE DEFINITION OF FREE MARKET.

                      There's a reasonable argument that there's a right number of Taxis. Too few and people don't get a proper service. Too many and there's congestion. Too many empty taxis waiting round.

                      And then, this gem: A free market finds A level, not necessarily the right level.

                      WTF is the "right" level, then? You clearly have no fucking clue, and have not cited a SINGLE source or answered any questions outside your little brain to the contrary...

                    • The right level is one that serves the needs of the city; enough for the passengers, not so many that they cause congestion; not so many that the drivers are impoverished. These problems happen in cities where there is no taxi regulation.

                      The random level that a free market finds doesn't serve anyone except possibly by chance.

            • Free marketers would say that the market would find the right level. But that's religion, not reality. A free market finds A level, not necessarily the right level.

              It's not religion any more than believing a wise and well informed third party can deduce the right value.

              It's less of a faith position to say that a well-informed third party can deduce value than to claim that a mass of uninformed individuals can.

              I once visited the famous tourist beauty spot of Biarritz in France. Beauty spot? It is ugly as all sin. The problem is that the mass of tourists have destroyed everything. You have clifftop walks which originally had planned paths, set out in concrete. Tourists didn't want to follow those paths, and walked across the grass. The authorities in Biarritz apparently too

              • It's not religion any more than believing a wise and well informed third party can deduce the right value.

                It's less of a faith position to say that a well-informed third party can deduce value than to claim that a mass of uninformed individuals can.

                Well, that's a difference in judgement. I don't think either of us can prove that point. All I can say is I believe there are way, way more cases where depending on individuals to jointly, through a free market, can come to a decision on an optimal balance than there cases where a central authority will come to a better answer.

                I once visited the famous tourist beauty spot of Biarritz in France. Beauty spot? It is ugly as all sin. The problem is that the mass of tourists have destroyed everything. You have clifftop walks which originally had planned paths, set out in concrete. Tourists didn't want to follow those paths, and walked across the grass. The authorities in Biarritz apparently took the view that you couldn't argue with the crowd, and they reinforced the new paths the tourist created.

                That's a shame. I don't know anything about Bairritz but I've got to wonder who was making the decisions and what their incentives are. If the decisions where to put paths was made by

                • My point is that "tragedy of the commons" is a misnomer, because in a true commons, the commoners are working for mutual interest, and between them come to conscious decisions, and compromises. There are no explicit multi-party compromises in an open market with no management.

                  The concept of the tragedy of the commons has been used to justify private land ownership, by claiming that the proprietor has a long-term stake in maintaining the quality of the land, but the result is quite the opposite -- private o

            • No, I don't think there is.

              I thought about this a little this morning and I was being a little arrogant myself. Of course we can have a reasonable discussion about this.

          • There's a reasonable argument that there's a right number of Taxis. Too few and people don't get a proper service. Too many and there's congestion. Too many empty taxis waiting round.

            No,. empty taxis makes no profit. This one of the business that can self balance, too many drivers drives drivers out of business, naturally..

      • these laws and regulations exist for a reason

        Sometimes for a good reason, but often for bad reasons, like cronyism and corruption. Do we really need to arrest people for painting toenails without a license?

        Can you point to any data that indicates that Uber is less safe or "worse" in some measurable way, compared to regulated taxis? If not, then what is the "reason" for the laws and regulations inhibiting competition and pushing up prices?

        If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it's a duck.

        If it looks like a shotgun, and operates like a shotgun, then you can use it to shoot a duck. Then the duck won't

        • My wife has had lymph nodes out and if she goes to a salon and they use cuticle pushers incorrectly and break her skin she could be in deep trouble. So yes, there needs to be a minimum ounce of safety even for salons.
          • My wife has had lymph nodes out and if she goes to a salon and they use cuticle pushers incorrectly and break her skin she could be in deep trouble. So yes, there needs to be a minimum ounce of safety even for salons.

            OK, you just hit on a really deep and subtle point.

            Absolutely, yes, there needs to be some quality standard for manicurists, drivers, engineers, and nuclear power plant operators.

            Now, here's the hard question: how best to arrange that? The safety standards aren't free. If they were, I'd ask that each manicurist have an MD so they can properly treat your wife should she get an open wound. So, clearly to me, we can't have all the safety precautions we can imagine. So the question is, what's the right level? A

            • Usually it's going to be a licensing board. It's to easy for a business to fake credentials without one.
              • Usually it's going to be a licensing board. It's to easy for a business to fake credentials without one.

                The problem with licensing boards is they have a conflict of interest. My understanding is it is quite common for licensing boards to be composed of or heavily influenced by members of the profession (look up regulatory capture [wikipedia.org]).

                So, what are the interests of the board? To protect their businesses. They do this in two major ways. One is to protect the business reputation. That's what we, the consumers, want. I want the board to give me assurance the practitioners are good, honest, and qualified, and that bad

                • I thought you meant a government sponsored licensing board. Must be regulated by government. No other way. And yes I know they can become corrupt to but so does anyone.
                  • I thought you meant a government sponsored licensing board. Must be regulated by government. No other way. And yes I know they can become corrupt to but so does anyone.

                    I don't think it matters if it's a government or industry sponsored licensing board. In both cases, companies have a strong interest in lobbying and influencing the board while customers have a much weaker interest in making sure proceeding are all above board. Look up the history of the Interstate Commerce Commission. It was the first agency intended to regulate railroads, yet within a few years, the railroads had captured the board and used it to drive competitors out of the market. The same story plays o

            • The hot answer these days for things like manicurists is reputation. Don't go to a salon with a 1.5 star rating on Yelp. That's how ride sharing and home sharing services also regulate their quality. And companies are really, really serious about maintaining their reputation.

              What happens when your top manicurist decides she's had enough of being the employee and opens her own salon, taking the best people on your staff with her? You get in new manicurists that can do the work, that's what! Ideally you'd be protecting your reputation by only hiring the best, but a reputation is no use whatsoever if you can't sell your services.

              It's the same in restaurants. All the reviews tell you how great the chef was, how clever the head chef's menu is, and those reviews don't disappear the

          • by kuzb ( 724081 )
            It's not up to the salon to cater to her medical condition. If a salon is that dangerous to her health, perhaps she should stop going.
      • and it's not to put a stop to everybody's fun. It's because people were being abused.

        - no, that's irrelevant, it's not because 'people were abused', many people are abused in many ways and this includes abuse by government. This is because governments are made of politicians that buy power from the mob with giving out promises and 'free' stuff. Governments should not be regulating any businesses at all for any purpose. There shouldn't be any income or property related taxes either. Government should only spend what they can get in taxes and shouldn't run deficits. Governments should s

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot&worf,net> on Friday November 25, 2016 @06:08PM (#53361877)

      Ebay will be called an auction place and have to abide by rules in every town.
      Paypal will be called a bank and have to obey laws.
      Every tech company figures they're semi avoiding laws at least cuz it is new. The motto in tech ask for forgiveness, not ask for permission. If you limit yourself, you might not ever have a good idea to make billions. I've had many ideas that turned into multimillion or multibillion dollar companies, but I didn't do them myself because I didn't have a crew to do them with. It doesn't bother me, but just reassuring that my ideas are good.

      eBay is an auction site and the sellers and buyers do have to abide by local laws. Like in Germany, eBay has had to remove Nazi stuff listed for sale, because it is illegal to sell those in Germany. eBay has also had to remove listings because they've violated laws.

      Paypal IS actually a bank in the EU.

      Anyhow, if the EU wants more e-commerce, why not start with something straightforward like selling of merchandise? Or even working on copyright and IP laws which would allow the sale of music, tv shows and movies throughout the EU without being country specific? That would seem to be the low-hanging fruit blocking EU-wide e-commerce.

      Going after someone like Uber is going to be hard. Because there are some laws you want them to follow (e.g., non-discrimination). And depending on the country, if a taxi driver doesn't want to carry a fare that's hired them, they're forced to call another taxi AND THEN wait with the fare until the replacement taxi arrives. (This is so the refusing taxi can't go and get someone more lucrative in the meantime, as well as if it's bad weather, the fare doesn't have to wait in the weather).

      • Anyhow, if the EU wants more e-commerce, why not start with something straightforward like selling of merchandise? Or even working on copyright and IP laws which would allow the sale of music, tv shows and movies throughout the EU without being country specific? That would seem to be the low-hanging fruit blocking EU-wide e-commerce.

        Nothing is blocking of that, except companies don't want to do it. If the EU wants to fix this (and they do), then need to make restrictive laws making a lot of standard practices and long term country-specific distribution contracts illegal.

        Anyway. Note the EU isn't targetting Uber, Uber is already illegal under existing rules, and just being sued for breaking the law. No laws were changed, unlike in the US where they intervened and legalized Uber's organized crime.

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )
      Ebay - Point out which laws and regulations they've violated? Ebay isn't a holding company like Sotheby's, it's more like a swap meet. Ebay do not in any way handle, represent or sell the merchandise, only facilitate the transaction.

      Paypal - Already done. Many governments have already said they're a bank and have to abide by banking rules.

      Uber isn't running a new form of disruptive technology. They're running an old fashioned black market cab company. This may be legal in some areas (I.E. in the UK) b
      • by Etcetera ( 14711 )

        Same as if I started selling beer on a street corner and called it "beverage sharing", I cant use an app to get around the fact I'm operating an unlicensed bar.

        cf. Napster

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 25, 2016 @04:44PM (#53361521)

    Supporters however say rigid regulatory obligations protect incumbents and hinder the entry of digital startups which offer looser work arrangements to workers in the 28-country European Union looking for more flexibility, albeit without basic rights.

    See, these folks are spinning it as an opportunity for folks - "be your own boss!", "Be an entrepreneur!", etc ....

    But they still rule your work. You still take on the business risk but aren't compensated for it. That's the trend - to push market and other business risks onto the worker - as well as the tax liability and hassle - and not compensating the worker for it.

    A 25% commission and booking fee on top of that is way too steep for what they (Uber) do. They have no risk and very little expense while the drivers deal with the headaches of owning the capital equipment and taxes and whatnot. It's great that by becoming an Uber driver, you can skate around taxi regulations, but never the less, it's a bad deal. Uber just supplies an app and a payment system (BFD), but the drivers are the ones who are supplying the real service and capital equipment. I

    • "A 25% commission and booking fee on top of that is way too steep for what they (Uber) do."

      right, and some even call it the 'sharing economy'.

      • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @05:25PM (#53361737)

        But it is a "sharing economy".
        Drivers share their income with Uber.

  • Do individuals have the right to pick up people and offer them a ride for a fee, or does the government have the right do define a class of people with that right.

    There is also the question of does the consumer have the right to decide what is in their best interest or does the government ?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      In the US (yes I know the story is about the EU) Individuals have very limited rights to do anything for a fee without registering a business. Actual companies with employees are even more limited.

      Re Uber, if there are laws regulating who can offer taxi services wherever they are picking the person up they have to follow those laws like any other company.

      If you don't like a law and choose to ignore it that is your choice but don't act surprised when police show up.

    • Do individuals have the right to pick up people and offer them a ride for a fee, or does the government have the right do define a class of people with that right.

      The former.

    • There are certain low frequency problems that are worth avoiding. For instance, there was a rash of sexual assaults about 20-30 years ago in rural Central Scotland by a guy who pretended to be a taxi driver. He used a radio scanner to listen out for dispatch messages for rides for 1 passenger with a female name, and if he could get there before the assigned driver, he'd pick the woman up. Sometimes if he decided he didn't fancy them he'd just tell them to get out in the middle of nowhere. They were the luck
    • Do individuals have the right to pick up people and offer them a ride for a fee

      Do you have the right to perform tax-evading work and willfully break government safety regulations? Sure I repair your electric outlets for a "shared repair-work" fee, and I don't need to stick to housing or education regulation because I am selling my service through an App!

  • Duh (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @05:03PM (#53361625)
    Just because you organize your taxi service over the internet doesn't mean your exempt for all other laws, regulations, or requirements for a taxi service. This applies to every other dot com whose business model is basically "Do a business that has been around for decades, but using the internet!" AirBNB? You need to follow the same rules as any other room rental agency. Amazon? People buying things over the internet still need to pay sales tax. Backpage.com? Soliciting prostitution is still soliciting prostitution.
    • Just because you organize your taxi service over the internet doesn't mean your exempt for all other laws, regulations, or requirements for a taxi service. This applies to every other dot com whose business model is basically "Do a business that has been around for decades, but using the internet!" AirBNB? You need to follow the same rules as any other room rental agency. Amazon? People buying things over the internet still need to pay sales tax. Backpage.com? Soliciting prostitution is still soliciting prostitution.

      Didn't you get the memo? We're in a post-reality world now.

      • Sorry, I'm not on the Trump memo distribution list. I voted for Hillary. I'm waiting to sent to a re-education camp when the Trump train really gets rolling...
  • It has nothing to do with boosting e-commerce and startup culture.

    This "we are an app company" is just like the software patent fiasco. Take a well-known process, add "with a computer" to it and file for a patent.

    This is the same. Take an existing industry, add "with an app" to it - and pretend that everything that is true about that industry doesn't apply to you, because you are something completely new and different.

    • I'm thinking I should start a food sharing service in my back yard that matches people to food that they may me for and I prepare. Think of all the health and safety regulations I could avoid!
      • by Tom ( 822 )

        Make sure to call it "Foodr" or you can't play with the cool boys.

        (sorry, the domain is already gone. Maybe "Eatr"? It's for sale)

  • by mea2214 ( 935585 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @09:06PM (#53362819)
    If I start up a service to connect Johns with women who are willing to serve them for money can I claim this as a "digital service" and not an escort company?
  • by aepervius ( 535155 ) on Saturday November 26, 2016 @03:44AM (#53364079)
    " Supporters however say rigid regulatory obligations protect incumbents and hinder the entry of digital startups which offer looser work arrangements to workers". I can't speak for all countries, but the requirement to be a taxi driver in germany is : 1) have a commercial insurance on the car 2) pass a governemental driving license exam 3) have "measured" counter for range counting to make sure the client is not ripped off 4) agree to have a minimum number of taxi at train station for people to easily get one and rule making so you can't refuse a course based on distance. Nothing in that protect incubent and hinder digital startup. They jsut do not want to respect the law because it cost money, whereas taking any joe blow from the street and pushing all risk on the client and driver cost nothing. They just want to cream up the thing without the cost.

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