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Businesses Government The Almighty Buck The Courts Transportation

Uber Contract 'Gibberish', Says MP Investigating Gig Economy (theguardian.com) 90

A committee of MPs has lambasted Uber's contracts with drivers as "gibberish" and "almost unintelligible" as the company attempts to ensure its drivers remain self-employed. From a report: Frank Field, chair of the work and pensions select committee that is carrying out an investigation into the so-called gig economy, said: "Quite frankly the Uber contract is gibberish. They are well aware that many, if not most, of their drivers speak English as a second language -- they recently lost a court case trying to escape Transport for London's new English testing rules for private hire drivers -- yet their contract is almost unintelligible." [...] Publishing full details of Uber's contract terms, along with those for the takeaway courier firm Deliveroo and Amazon, Field said all three used some kind of "egregious clause" which attempted to prevent people challenging their "self-employed" designation, although neither Uber's nor Amazon's contract went as far as Deliveroo's, in the committee's view.
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Uber Contract 'Gibberish', Says MP Investigating Gig Economy

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  • by viperidaenz ( 2515578 ) on Thursday April 06, 2017 @07:15PM (#54188651)

    Law overrides contracts, less the law specifically states it can be contracted out of.

    Perhaps there should be penalties for putting in clauses that contradict law. The companies put them in to scare people in to not exercising their legal rights, knowing they're not enforceable.

    I wonder if it would be covered under existing "obtaining by deception" or "loss by deception" laws...

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Don't let Roman.mir know you just dissed the contract.

      He will fume in rage. Impotent, futile, rage.

      • by Khyber ( 864651 )

        I haven't seen him since we last fucked him without lube for his admitting to age discrimination. Has he shown up since then?

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      There is a contract law that covers this situation. Basically if a contract is bad enough, they grab it, rip in into a thousand tiny pieces and bin it, figuratively speaking. Then the court works through proper remuneration for the service provided, generally speaking this will go against those who produced the contract. Similarly ambiguous or contradictory contact conditions are always meant to go against those who produced the contract, their contract, their responsibility for failure. However US courts a

      • Does the US have "MP"s? Other than Military Police?

        Did you fail to notice that this is the UK?

        For consumer contracts, UK law requires that they be 'plain and intelligible language'. [plainenglish.co.uk] But these are not consumer contracts.

        • by Altrag ( 195300 )

          Member of Parliament. Approximately at the same level of government as an American member of Congress (though due to the forms of government being different, their powers and responsibilities don't exactly equate.)

      • ...unfortunately taking to the high court will mean loss against a major corporation no matter how fanciful the interpretation has to be by the high court

        Actually, in the current term, businesses wins against non-business petitioners a little under 2/3rds of the time[1]. So your conception of "no matter how fanciful" is at least a few orders of magnitudes off of the facts.

        [1] Epstein, Landes and Posner, How Business Fares in the Supreme Court, 97 Minn. L. Rev. 1431 (2013) PDF [minnesotalawreview.org].

        • Generally the tactic is to assume most of the little parties won't take you to court, most of the rest will accept a hush-up settlement, and the few remaining who go to court is a reasonable business expense. So that 1/3 who win against large corporations are a small fragment of total parties affected by contracts.

          And corporate lawyers aren't really so great from what I've seen. There is a lot of rote work by underworked and underpaid underlings. I've heard from engineering contractors relating stories a

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by zifn4b ( 1040588 )

      Law overrides contracts, less the law specifically states it can be contracted out of.

      Perhaps there should be penalties for putting in clauses that contradict law. The companies put them in to scare people in to not exercising their legal rights, knowing they're not enforceable.

      I wonder if it would be covered under existing "obtaining by deception" or "loss by deception" laws...

      You mean like employment contracts? Good luck with that.

  • by sexconker ( 1179573 ) on Thursday April 06, 2017 @07:16PM (#54188657)

    The jig is up on the "gig" economy. I can't wait for it to completely collapse. I hope the short-term rental economy goes next.

    • The jig is up on the "gig" economy. I can't wait for it to completely collapse. I hope the short-term rental economy goes next.

      I think people miss the point of the gig economy. The big win isn't that you're hiring contractors with unconventional hours. The win is you don't have to raise capital to start your business. The gig employees bring their own capital with them. Uber doesn't have to invest in a fleet of cars, Airbnb doesn't have to buy a lot of real estate, and so forth. It makes it much, much cheaper to run the company because your capital outlay is so much lower. You can also grow much faster than a traditionally financed

  • by Anonymous Coward

    If the conservatives had their way, then ALL companies would be like that.

    You know, small governement, little to no legislation, the free market will fix itself and bla bla bla.

    Too bad neocons, libertarianism has already been tried. It was called feudalism, corporatism and fascism. And every time it was a disaster.

    • by Altrag ( 195300 )

      While I'm certainly no hard core conservative, your examples are.. not even misleading they're just flat out wrong.

      Feudalism? As in when local warlords continually fight over chunks of land and the peasants are little better than slaves? Pretty sure there's not much freedom in a market that's basically "give me all your stuff or I'll kill you and your family and maybe your entire village."

      Corporatism isn't even a real thing. Its a derogatory term for our current system since it sometimes (well OK, often)

  • is why they even bother? I don't have a lot of faith that any of this is a serious attempt to reign Uber in. They're blatantly flaunting laws about employment. If anyone really cared they'd have shut down Uber a long time ago.

    My only question is: I've watched about a dozen of these "Gig Economy" companies get shut down because they were obviously employers. Uber's doing the exact same thing. How are they surviving? Are the CEOs/Investors just that much better connected?
  • If you don't understand a contract, find a way to understand it or don't sigh it. Sounds like they're just being lazy and greedy instead of doing things the proper way.
    • by Cederic ( 9623 )

      Or gleefully sign away, knowing that under the law it's unenforceable.

      Given that contracts are often discussed at great length in court cases by trained legal professionals I think it's reasonable to suggest that nobody can understand a contract, and so you're effectively saying that nobody should ever sign one.

      I'm fairly sure I don't correctly interpret multiple legal terms in contracts that I sign. I avoid having to pay thousands of pounds to lawyers every time I sign up for a new TV, telephone, power or

  • Well that's one thing that MPs are expert on: Giberish
  • by Anonymous Coward

    From my short time with Uber I realized their ethics are at zero and they pride themselves at skirting regulations and laws. It's almost an obsession with them to try and out play outside the rules. Case in point is current litigation Waymo has against their former engineer and Uber. Can't wait until Uber totally self destructs which is almost a given.

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