Uber Embraces Videotaping Rides, Raising Privacy Concerns (nytimes.com) 80
For several months, some Uber passengers in Texas have been recorded on video as they have been driven to their destinations. The video has been stored online and could have been reviewed by members of Uber's safety staff if the driver had reported a problem with the passenger. From a report: The video recordings are part of a broad initiative at the ride-hailing company to capture more objective data about what happens inside vehicles during Uber trips, where disputes between riders and drivers often play out without witnesses. Uber has experienced years of complaints about the safety of its riders and drivers, who are often left to sort out episodes without the help of the company, and it has settled lawsuits claiming that it does not do enough to protect passengers. But as Uber increases the practice of recording drivers and passengers, the company is facing new privacy pressures. "Uber already has this treasure trove of highly personal data about people," said Camille Fischer, a staff lawyer at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "When you pair surveillance during those trips, whether it's over the driver or over the passenger, you are getting a more fine-tuned snapshot of people's daily lives." Uber began the video recording program in Texas in July, and is conducting smaller tests of the program in Florida and Tennessee. In November, it announced a similar effort in Brazil and Mexico to allow riders and drivers to record audio during a trip.
Does this mean new season of Taxi Cab Confessions? (Score:5, Funny)
Illegal voyeurism? (Score:1)
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The law and harsh punishments.
Besides, a small percentage of drivers doing something illegal is one thing. Mass surveillance is another.
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Maybe don't do that then? Many taxis have taken to videoing everything that happens in them as well to protect the drivers. It's not your private car.
No privacy in a public place (Score:5, Informative)
There is no reasonable privacy in a public place - just require notices that the ride is recorded.
Re:No privacy in a public place (Score:5, Insightful)
Time to pass laws requiring respect for privacy in public places and public accomodations. Love that the EU is gradually doing so.
I'd support a reasonable compromise -- something like: in the absence of a criminal investigation or lawsuit, footage must be deleted within 30-60 days.
There's no reason why all of our public behavior: what we talked about, whom we kissed in a cab (rideshare) 20 years ago, how we looked, etc, needs to become part of our permanent record.
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Do you have the same expectation for banks and gas stations? If not, why not? If so, why so?
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Yes: banks and gas stations should also be subject to strict data-retention limits. There's a public interest in catching and deterring robbery, but it shouldn't mean that everyone entering or exiting one of those establishments should be logged forever.
More importantly, there should be restrictions in these semi-public places on how those recordings can be used and released. I'm all for security cameras in taxis and ride shares to protect the drivers, but they should only be allowed to release them to law enforcement and insurance companies, not publicly at a whim. And I agree, data retention should also be included. The maximum should be the time limit a customer has to sue you for something.
Re: No privacy in a public place (Score:1)
"they should only be allowed to release them to law enforcement and insurance companies"
Of course, comrade, the gestapo and the Social Credit Scoring agencies will have access. Of course.
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Yes: banks and gas stations should also be subject to strict data-retention limits
Okay, but why?
I'm asking because it seems like these are public places, however they're not. They're private places. I have cameras all around my house outside. Some are pointing out into the street, others are simply viewing my yard. As a private camera owner, should there be some inherent requirement for me to not keep the videos for a certain amount of time? Good luck enforcing that.
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Think of it this way: you can choose not to let someone whose ethnicity you don't like into your house. As a bank or gas station, you can't legally choose not to serve people of certain ethnicities.
Under federal anti-discrimination laws, businesses can refuse service to any person for any reason, unless the business is discriminating against a protected class.
At the national level, protected classes include:
Race or color
National origin or citizenship status
Religion or creed
Sex
Age
Disability, pregnancy, or genetic information
Veteran status
Some states, like California, have more protected classes than the federal baseline. In addition to the above factors, California adds:
Marital status
Sexual orientatio
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Dunno. After reading over several things about this, I think that if you invited a friend over for dinner, and that friend wanted to bring another friend, one that you've not met, and you agree, but when they get there you don't allow the new friend inside your house due to their ethnicity, and they are forced away with no food, they can probably successfully sue you.
As far as data retention, how would that be enforceable?
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Or one could just behave respectably when in public. Shocking concept but it's just crazy enough that it might work.
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Just from the tone of that aside I'd say you're fairly ignorant of how much side car riding Americans do.
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There already IS a compromise in place. It's called "if you're outside your house, and not in a bathroom or changing room or hotel room, you have no reasonable expectation of privacy."
Being in public means being in public. Cabs are public. Uber is public.
I also don't get why anyone thinks forcing people to erase evidence of your being in public after a certain period of time serves any purpose. Though sadly we are seeing "right to be forgotten" being pushed more and m
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"Being in public means being in public."
Being in public doesn't mean consent to be recorded and tracked and to have all your actions collated and published and commented on. Its never meant that before. It certainly didn't mean that 50 years ago. Technology couldn't do it, and anyone trying to do it manually would have been arrested for stalking you.
Just because technology can now do it to everyone at once doesn't make it somehow "ok" now.
What's your ideal future hold? Chinese social credit scores. That's dystopian. You think that's freedom?
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The problem isn't that whom we kissed in a cab 20 years ago might embarrass us if it becomes public. The problem is that whom we kissed in a cab 20 years ago is considered embarrassing in the first place. One of the drawbacks of privacy is that it allows us to hide our failures, while
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Sure, and the minute that we can guarantee that passengers in taxis and ubers won't threaten the drivers or worse, then we can do that. But since that currently doesn't happen, the drivers and businesses need to protect their interests.
https://nypost.com/2017/04/05/passenger-from-hell-threatens-to-accuse-uber-driver-of-rape/
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/edmonton-cabbie-sues-passengers-over-false-assault-allegations-1.797780
https://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2019/01/23/sacramento-uber-drivers-battl
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Re: No privacy in a public place (Score:1)
How's that bootleather taste?
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The difference is that in a taxi, you can pay good, old-fashioned, cold, hard, cash. If you pay cash, the driver doesn't have any identifying information, so s/he would be hard-pressed to find out whom to blackmail. (Facial recognition DB searches aren't available to the average cabbie.)
Also, most taxis tend to record locally, with limited storage, on a loop. Footage gets deleted after (at most) a few days, not sent to the "clown."
Videotaping isn't bad though (Score:2)
It's hard to get VHS copies uploaded to the internet.
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It's hard to get VHS copies uploaded to the internet.
Not too difficult actually. I've got a working Sharp VHS/DVD recorder, it can dub VHS to DVD-Rs which my PC DVD drive can rip. I'm in the process of transferring old family VHS videos to USB stick for my sister.
Kudos to Sharp for keeping the relevant manuals on line and for the equipment still working perfectly despite not being used for 10 years.
NB. These recorders are available on ebay from less than $100/£100 if you have any precious VHS ta
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It's not impossible - I used a Replay TV paired with a VHS to digitize some old VHS recordings then pulled the digital stream to my PC.
But unless you're a tech-head like us....
(The irony was that some of these recordings were original airings of shows like ST:TNG - I didn't digitize them for the shows themselves but for the ads and bumpers and skipped over the recordings I had painstakingly sat through and paused through the commercials!)
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If Taxi services have cameras... (Score:1)
Re: If Taxi services have cameras... (Score:1)
Totalitarian surveillance will save us from entitled stupid people!!
Wesley was a prophet (Score:1)
Point of Order Mr. Chairman (Score:2)
Do we still use the word "videotape?"
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Re:Good (Score:4, Interesting)
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Sure, just as soon as the statues of limitation are also reduced to the same period. I can't tell you how many times I've been asked to pull footage from 6-12 months ago when a bogus slip-and-fall lawsuit gets filed that no one even knew happened.
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"deletion of footage might have the effect of deterring lawsuits and prosecutions filed way after the fact"
The opposite is true. They intentionally wait to file bogus lawsuits HOPING that the footage has been erased. Happens every day. Especially government buildings/facilities or large corporations where juries are more likely to side with the "victim". Without hard evidence proving the claim is meritless the plaintiffs are inclined to settle to avoid the costs of litigation. These cases get dropped a
Re: Good (Score:1)
Totalitarian ubiquitous panopticon surveillance will save us all from fraudulent lawsuits!!
Dash cams are a necessary evil (Score:3)
There was a well-publicized incident in which a drunken, verbally abusive passenger threatened her Uber driver by saying "I'm going to scream out the window that you raped me". (https://woldcnews.com/1590075/uber-permanently-bans-bronx-woman-who-falsely-accused-driver-of-rape/). What saved the driver was dashcam footage.
If I were driving for Lyft/Uber, there's no way I'd get in the car without a dashcam.
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And from the other side, I've heard a common scam for Uber drivers has been to claim you threw up in their car when you didn't to collect a cleanup fee.
It really just boils down to each actor not being able to trust the other.
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It's insensible not to have video recording (Score:2)
It protects everyone involved.
The flip side is that now you need protection from whoever holds the recordings.
The phone should be capable of operating both cameras at once (AFAIK most can't, at least not both in video mode at once, but I've been wrong before) and it should be mounted where it can see in and out at the same time. Both videos should be encrypted with threshold encryption [wikipedia.org] with three keys, and requiring 2/3 of the keys to decrypt, so that any of driver+passenger, driver+uber, or passenger+uber
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Wouldn't this provide enough information to adjudicate claims of driver misbehavior while simultaneously protecting the privacy of the passenger(s)?
Sometimes the passengers act inappropriately. The drivers need protection, too.
Re: It's insensible not to have video recording (Score:1)
Totalitarian surveillance will save us all from inappropriate behavior!!
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On a side note, I do find the whole debate a bit humorous. I wonder how some of the people arguing for or against this would feel if their arguments were applied to firearms. I've seen a few people who I'm quite certain would argue th
Re: It's insensible not to have video recording (Score:1)
"No one's stopping you from starting a competing service"
Great! Now if only I can find some inbred VCs who will fund my company while it loses billions every year! Wait, what do you mean, not everyone has the same access to capital??
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Anyone ridden public transportation? (Score:3)
If the uber solution is roughly the same, I see no issue with this. It protects both the drivers of being falsely accused of actions, and also the riders from incorrect actions by the riders.
Somehow, I would like it to be when a ride has been identified as starting. The video would begin recording. And when the ride ends The video stops recording. Or, something like that. It would have to be triggered by the application on the drivers phone, by the actions that he takes to get paid for the ride.
There is a need for this, but it has to be done right.
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I bet you don't think people have a right to use surveillance cameras on their own property, now do you? You against business's having camera's on their physical property to stop shoplifting and other crimes. Or what, would
Re: Anyone ridden public transportation? (Score:1)
Who's taking about assaults? Assaults have _never_ been common in public transport. Your panopticon has jack shit to do with that. Typical Nazi, moving the goalposts.
We were talking about annoying petty crime. I still see plenty of pickpocketing on transit vehicles. You would know this is you ever actually rode public transport. The Nazi spy cameras don't do anything to prevent it. The police don't seem inclined to give a shit about it. Small crime happening to small people: DUH LAW just doesn't care.
Do yo
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Re: Anyone ridden public transportation? (Score:1)
So the Corporate Official Media show you a video of someone getting jacked on the RTA, and claim the cops arrested someone (the right someone?) because of the video. That's enough for you - you're ready to throw freedom in the trash can and eagerly embrace the totalitarian surveillance state. Really, bro, really?
When I was a kid - not that far from where you live - the civics teacher told us why the Soviet Union was bad and America was good. "In the Soviet Union, wherever you go, cameras spy on you. We don'
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The problem is that there is a huge difference between "public spaces arent private" and "every second I'm out of my home I'm being recorded."
Where does it end? Everyone being required to wear a bodycam at all times? If that's what society demands, fuck that society.
Don't regular taxis already have this? (Score:4, Informative)
Mmm, let's see ... (Score:2)
There are cameras filming you when you walk on the street, in planes, trains, buses, taxis (NY next month) and now there's a riot about Uber?
The kids are filming themselves _in_ the Uber half the time!
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It's exactly because of that that people are complaining. Do you think the people complaining about this are happy about all the other public recordings? Different people have different tolerances, and as surveillance becomes more constant more people are going, "Hey wait a minute..."
If the only thing keeping people from raping and murdering in the streets is 24/7 surveillance, maybe our society has deeper issues that need addressed.
I'm pretty sure you didn't mean (Score:2)
"video taping". That's so 1990s.
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Video clouding?
Maybe Video USBing
Let the riders and drivers decide (Score:2)
Psychopath culture solutions to social problems (Score:1)
Typical. They see a social problem (of anti-social behavior, and hence mistrust), and find a brutal, anti-social, technical "solution".
It reminds me of a family member of mine with that same illness.
Why are the drivers and passengers treat each other like crap?
*Because they don't see each other as people!* But as anonymous interchangeable entities!
*Because they don't know each other, and never could feel empathy for each other!*
Humans are wired like that. Sociopaths/psychopaths are hard-wired like that, and