Even though I loathe Uber I read their lawyer saying the ex-employee was extorting them.
Then I read that Uber paid him 4.5 million ... umm Uber paid that much to an extortionist for claims that aren’t truthful? Ok yeah right .. whose pays that much to silence a lier?
Really, Uber paid $7,500,000 to "settle" that little dispute -- although his lawyer got a 40% cut, leaving him with "only" $4.5MM. To me, at least, it seems even worse when you think about it that way.
The theory is that you might be inclined to pay in order to avoid a scandal that would be costlier.
For this kind of scandal, my armchair opinion is that you still have to do something at least a bit murky in order to allow yourself to be black mailed.
Agreed. Back when the news of the payoff first became public things were a lot murkier in terms of the broad picture but now that we've had the lid peeled back and we can see a bit more.
It seems a bit more obvious, to me at least, that Uber was and still is doing whatever it can to try to get to final valuation / being bought out / IPO before the severity of the scandal was fully known. I also think that we've reached the point of no return for that matter so I'm definitely interested to see how Uber and this entire debacle winds up.
Is this a bot which comments exact same thing on every Uber story? Just an observation because of how most of your comments make sense but every uber story has exact same question.
Some of us are lucky enough to live in cities where public-transport is both common-place and effective.
I've used Uber a couple of times in the UK, but only on a company-account. Here where I live there is a presence, but I've never used it personally, nor do I intend to. (Same goes for competitors.)
i meant the exact same statement "It never fucking ends with this company" ..This same user puts this exact same response on every post. Uber deserves it or not is not even the question. I am just curious if there are bots on HN.
This is what the behavior of a wannabe megacorp looks like:
> Uber “used undercover agents to collect intelligence against the taxi groups and local political figures. The agents took rides in local taxis, loitered around locations where taxi drivers congregated, and leveraged a local network of contacts with connections to police and regulatory authorities.”
> the things Uber was doing overseas “needlessly exposed Uber and its employees to severe risk — including the likely termination of Uber's operations and possible imprisonment of its employees — should capable security services in many overseas locations discover Uber's espionage.”
> Uber hired at least one CIA-trained contractor to collect "mobile-phone metadata either directly through signal-intercept equipment, hacked mobile devices, or through the mobile network itself.
Taking rides in taxis and loitering where they congregate isn’t necessarily illegal. Bribing foreign officials and illegally tapping peoples’ phones is. There is a bright line between hustling and plainly violating the law.
IANAL but definitions of espionage are typically broader than that - if the information isn't published with the intention for it to become public knowledge, or at least somehow knowingly divulged (e.g. EULA/contractual), then it's private, and collecting (i.e. recording) the data which is private to a company or society is espionage.
Well sure, the word "espionage" can be certainly be used to make things that aren't illegal or immoral sound bad.
Employees and other people sign contracts to keep company information private, but nobody else (including journalists, competitors, investors, or just anyone curious about them) is required to help them. We can share what we know and gossip about it.
How can someone derive publisher's intent from the content alone? If data is left on a publicly accessible URL, how do I know it's because a dev forgot to enable s3 bucket encryption?
Sadly that bright line is pretty dim in some companies. As soon as there is one "hard-to-fix" transgression, the organization finds a way to internally justify it. The first transgression makes additional transgressions feel easier.
This is often sold to staff under the guise of "but everyone does it" and "there's no way to be 100% compliant/legal".
There's some in-between behavior as well. Like where Uber finds a way to programmatically identify drivers that are also working for Lyft via API calls.
Nor does law enforcement, for that matter. Operating a Stingray-like device to capture cellular user information is very, very illegal in the United States without proper authority to do so. Even capturing open Wi-Fi that you do not control is legally perilous and has divided courts on its legality, which seems counterintuitive on its face given the simple physics of radio, but is a fact.
It’s stupidly simple to run afoul of the CFAA and federal wiretapping laws, not to mention the expectation of privacy standard in California.
To the millions of customers around the world? Mostly no.
Also, in the court of public opinion, the punishment for breaking laws depends a lot on what the law was, to what effect was it broken, in what circumstances it was broken, and so on.
It’s pretty rare, but it does happen every now and then. Arthur Andersen was convicted of criminal obstruction of justice. Because their entire business model was predicated on being trustworthy, they imploded really quickly. (Ironically the damage was mostly done before their conviction was overturned, but they were still guilty as hell.)
For Uber, since their business model seems to be completely unrelated to their inherent untrustworthiness, it’s unlikely that a criminal conviction would have such dramatic consequences. The FBI doesn’t fuck around with bribing foreign officials though, so it wouldn’t surprise me at all to see someone go to the pokey over that.
You never know, though. That might be enough to get local governments to ban them.
Wow. I can see why Uber did not want this document to come out. It appears that Uber was operating their own intelligence agency with bribes, surveillance, breach of systems, impersonation, etc. I can see it opening further lawsuits from many other angles.
From competitors like Lyft:
>"Uber had successfully obtained trade secrets with the complete download of its driver database ... It
contained approximately 35,000 taxi driver records"
>"Uber used driver and customer impersonation to steal
competitor trade secrets. This conduct not only violated the trade secrets law discussed above but also wire fraud law"
From regulators:
> "In January 2017, contacted Jacobs on Wickr and advised they had a bug in a meeting with transport regulators and
that they needed help cleaning up the audio."
> "Jacobs heard about the practice of bribing foreign government officials. Based on his knowledge of targeting foreign officials to identify those with influential power, and the rapid insights into new markets"
Regarding this: “Uber had successfully obtained trade secrets with the complete download of its driver database”
If you look at how that is described in the document it appears that such data was actually obtained just by using the API and perhaps some scraping. Not so sure this actually has any legal issues. The API requests being spread over a 2 month timeframe also makes it hard to accuse them of causing any sort of burdensome load on the server.
The statute I referenced specifically prohibits the unauthorized access of servers and access which exceeds authorization. It is not difficult to argue that Uber’s activities fall under “unauthorized access” or “exceeding authorization”.
“Uber accessed a protected computer database to lure drivers away to work for the company even though "the database was protected by 'Captcha' to prevent the sort of automated downloading that Uber's MA team intended to carry out. MA was ultimately successful in hacking the system and obtaining the driver database. Because Uber knowingly accessed a protected computer in order to fraudulently capture its valuable contents to gain a competitive advantage, the hack violates the [Computer Fraud and Abuse Act], as well as California Penal Code Section 502."”
The CFAA is broad by design unfortunately. We’ve jailed people for enumerating customer data by incrementing a query parameter.
I have a long-bet that Uber will be out of business by August 2020. A friend and I have a decent bottle of wine (Grange Hermitage) riding on the outcome. And with every passing month I feel more and more confident!
It's obviously possible they'll limp through the deadline, or sell some assets like the brand. But I want to believe a company driven by ethics this bad from the top down, and which loses this much money month on month, can't survive. Bring on the fragmented second-movers in the space.
Has a company ever gone bankrupt due to bad ethics where it wasn't also a financial fraud? The core Uber business seems to still be doing well and resetting the taint of bad ethics is as easy as putting up a "under new management" sign - which what they've done
Risky bet. Majority of Uber users don't know what Hacker News is. Even less heard about negative press they getting. Don't even mention about these few that care so long as cheap ride fairly safe is provided to them.
Revenue/user growth are irrelevant if your business model is to raise money for goods/services that cost you more money than you can charge from random users who have no brand loyalty. Uber's in a market in which there are no barriers to entry. It's a race to the bottom and waymo/lyft have better strategies thus far. (Lyft: raise less money at a reasonable valuation - stick with a crappy product in markets that actually matter, Waymo: Go fully autonomous using Google tech). Uber is the worst of both worlds. 2020 sounds reasonable to me after a snap-style IPO - Uber burns a lot more money than Snap :-)
I'm no uber fan but I don't see them ever going away. It may downsize or it may merge with a competitor but I don't see the uber app ever going away. Plus they have a lot of paper assets. 20% of Didi is 10B alone. And they have a piece of that Russian company. Also who knows how much all that user data is worth. It seems they have more assets than just cash on hand. I think they'll end up merging with a competitor and operating in the US under the uber brand. Or they'll sell of those assets, and scale way back and hope to partner someone with a working self driving.
Isn't this the same old news from a week or two ago? Something about a letter from lawyers of guy that worked at Uber, that contains various allegations, some of which the guy now refuses to acknowledge. Very confusing.
It came out in 3 news items. First it was reported that Alsup had received evidence from the DOJ which prompted him to delay the case. Earlier this week parts of the letter was made available to the public, and today much more about the letter, and where it came from was revealed.
May be I am being too naive, but can somebody answer two questions for me here (note: I have no personal relationship with Uber or Lyft except that I like ride sharing services more than traditional taxis):
(1) Taxi industry has been using medallion system to create artificial scarcity and scam passengers by providing low quality service at higher prices. And, this scam has been running with the help of local politicians at false pretexts (too many taxis ruin the look and appeal of the city etc.). What exactly are Uber's options in a city where the scam is supported by politicians?
(2) I personally know a lot of cities where Uber sued or used other means to force the local politicians to open up the city for ride sharing services. This benefited not only Uber, but other ride sharing companies too such as Lyft. If we believe that Uber used unethical means to get in many of the cities, what ethical responsibilities do we expect from Lyft? Should Lyft stay away from these cities or is it ethical for them to take a dip in these unethical gains provided by Uber?
”What exactly are Uber's options in a city where the scam is supported by politicians?”
The management could always open up a pizza company.
If your business model sucks because it depends on regulators giving you a break, that’s on you. No business has the right to be profitable, that’s how capitalism works.
If Uber however lawfully changes the regulations with the help of the court system, they need to understand they aren’t a special snowflake that are the only ones allowed in on the market.
(1) Only some cities use medallions. Many do not. Many more have little to zero taxi presence - you won't see cabs waiting on city streets to pick folks up. Gotta call to get one and wait. But there is a slew of other regulations to follow - such as having a special category of drivers license. The options for Uber are to follow laws or work on changing them if they want to work legally. In my opinion, this is Lyft's greatest strength. They tend to work with others.
(2) Suing isn't illegal, and a valid form of getting things changed. And sure, others can benefit from this way of working with instead of against the system, just like a ruling on gay marriage isn't limited to the one couple that sued. Or like civil rights aren't limited to the few that caused problems. Asking Lyft to stay away because the market was helped by someone else doing things isn't exactly fair (Lyft has been going into markets as well and trying to change things, so I refuse to give all credit to Uber. Uber simply gets more press).
Lawsuits aren't really the thing that is unethical, though. We expect companies to not spy. Not outright break the law. Treat people equally. and so on. This applies to lyft as well as Uber.
67 comments
[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 136 ms ] threadThen I read that Uber paid him 4.5 million ... umm Uber paid that much to an extortionist for claims that aren’t truthful? Ok yeah right .. whose pays that much to silence a lier?
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/bill-oreilly-settlement...
For this kind of scandal, my armchair opinion is that you still have to do something at least a bit murky in order to allow yourself to be black mailed.
It seems a bit more obvious, to me at least, that Uber was and still is doing whatever it can to try to get to final valuation / being bought out / IPO before the severity of the scandal was fully known. I also think that we've reached the point of no return for that matter so I'm definitely interested to see how Uber and this entire debacle winds up.
I've used Uber a couple of times in the UK, but only on a company-account. Here where I live there is a presence, but I've never used it personally, nor do I intend to. (Same goes for competitors.)
> Uber “used undercover agents to collect intelligence against the taxi groups and local political figures. The agents took rides in local taxis, loitered around locations where taxi drivers congregated, and leveraged a local network of contacts with connections to police and regulatory authorities.”
> the things Uber was doing overseas “needlessly exposed Uber and its employees to severe risk — including the likely termination of Uber's operations and possible imprisonment of its employees — should capable security services in many overseas locations discover Uber's espionage.”
> Uber hired at least one CIA-trained contractor to collect "mobile-phone metadata either directly through signal-intercept equipment, hacked mobile devices, or through the mobile network itself.
Or, perhaps, a nation-state.
Employees and other people sign contracts to keep company information private, but nobody else (including journalists, competitors, investors, or just anyone curious about them) is required to help them. We can share what we know and gossip about it.
This is often sold to staff under the guise of "but everyone does it" and "there's no way to be 100% compliant/legal".
It’s stupidly simple to run afoul of the CFAA and federal wiretapping laws, not to mention the expectation of privacy standard in California.
Well ... guess that's why the phrase "damning with faint praise" exists ...
Also, in the court of public opinion, the punishment for breaking laws depends a lot on what the law was, to what effect was it broken, in what circumstances it was broken, and so on.
For Uber, since their business model seems to be completely unrelated to their inherent untrustworthiness, it’s unlikely that a criminal conviction would have such dramatic consequences. The FBI doesn’t fuck around with bribing foreign officials though, so it wouldn’t surprise me at all to see someone go to the pokey over that.
You never know, though. That might be enough to get local governments to ban them.
Also some states can apparently sue to have corporations dissolved. https://www.wired.com/story/equifax-deserves-the-corporate-d...
How Uber Deceives the Authorities Worldwide [0]
[0] https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/03/technology/uber-greyball-...
From competitors like Lyft:
>"Uber had successfully obtained trade secrets with the complete download of its driver database ... It contained approximately 35,000 taxi driver records"
>"Uber used driver and customer impersonation to steal competitor trade secrets. This conduct not only violated the trade secrets law discussed above but also wire fraud law"
From regulators:
> "In January 2017, contacted Jacobs on Wickr and advised they had a bug in a meeting with transport regulators and that they needed help cleaning up the audio."
> "Jacobs heard about the practice of bribing foreign government officials. Based on his knowledge of targeting foreign officials to identify those with influential power, and the rapid insights into new markets"
If you look at how that is described in the document it appears that such data was actually obtained just by using the API and perhaps some scraping. Not so sure this actually has any legal issues. The API requests being spread over a 2 month timeframe also makes it hard to accuse them of causing any sort of burdensome load on the server.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_Fraud_and_Abuse_Act
That link to the CFAA page on Wikipedia does not substantiate your claim.
“Uber accessed a protected computer database to lure drivers away to work for the company even though "the database was protected by 'Captcha' to prevent the sort of automated downloading that Uber's MA team intended to carry out. MA was ultimately successful in hacking the system and obtaining the driver database. Because Uber knowingly accessed a protected computer in order to fraudulently capture its valuable contents to gain a competitive advantage, the hack violates the [Computer Fraud and Abuse Act], as well as California Penal Code Section 502."”
The CFAA is broad by design unfortunately. We’ve jailed people for enumerating customer data by incrementing a query parameter.
https://www.wired.com/2013/03/att-hacker-gets-3-years/amp/
It's obviously possible they'll limp through the deadline, or sell some assets like the brand. But I want to believe a company driven by ethics this bad from the top down, and which loses this much money month on month, can't survive. Bring on the fragmented second-movers in the space.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/lensherman/2017/12/14/why-cant-...
Tell it is Instagram.. haven't generated single dime yet sold for billions.
Google integrates Uber in their maps long time ago.. wouldn't be surprised they would want to buy it regardless of their financial situation.
(1) Taxi industry has been using medallion system to create artificial scarcity and scam passengers by providing low quality service at higher prices. And, this scam has been running with the help of local politicians at false pretexts (too many taxis ruin the look and appeal of the city etc.). What exactly are Uber's options in a city where the scam is supported by politicians?
(2) I personally know a lot of cities where Uber sued or used other means to force the local politicians to open up the city for ride sharing services. This benefited not only Uber, but other ride sharing companies too such as Lyft. If we believe that Uber used unethical means to get in many of the cities, what ethical responsibilities do we expect from Lyft? Should Lyft stay away from these cities or is it ethical for them to take a dip in these unethical gains provided by Uber?
The management could always open up a pizza company.
If your business model sucks because it depends on regulators giving you a break, that’s on you. No business has the right to be profitable, that’s how capitalism works.
If Uber however lawfully changes the regulations with the help of the court system, they need to understand they aren’t a special snowflake that are the only ones allowed in on the market.
(2) Suing isn't illegal, and a valid form of getting things changed. And sure, others can benefit from this way of working with instead of against the system, just like a ruling on gay marriage isn't limited to the one couple that sued. Or like civil rights aren't limited to the few that caused problems. Asking Lyft to stay away because the market was helped by someone else doing things isn't exactly fair (Lyft has been going into markets as well and trying to change things, so I refuse to give all credit to Uber. Uber simply gets more press).
Lawsuits aren't really the thing that is unethical, though. We expect companies to not spy. Not outright break the law. Treat people equally. and so on. This applies to lyft as well as Uber.