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  • In another line of attack, he also argues that ride-hailing services like Uber and Lyft are the future of transportation, not buses and trains. “Why wou Asked whether low-income people could afford to use Uber instead of a bus, he said that subsidizing their rides would still be more
    19 KB (2,989 words) - 14:28, 21 September 2019
  • ...—such as Amazon.com Inc., Alphabet Inc.’s Google unit, Apple Inc., and Uber Technologies Inc., among others—which are not improving the U.S. socioeco
    10 KB (1,628 words) - 13:44, 31 January 2019
  • ...t scholar has even called on the FTC to attack local regulations governing Uber in exchange for prohibiting the company from deceiving riders about its pri ...ndish against pow- erful firms (ranging from digital labor platforms, like Uber or Amazon’s mTurk, to an increasingly concentrated health care industry).
    60 KB (8,870 words) - 13:51, 9 March 2019
  • [[Category:Uber]] {{URL | url = https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/03/lyft-and-uber-are-making-traffic-worse/586054/}}
    8 KB (1,361 words) - 22:04, 4 May 2019
  • ...religions or genders they don’t like. And unlike stores and restaurants, Uber and Lyft are essentially a duopoly in most of the nation, meaning that if y
    6 KB (1,064 words) - 19:43, 10 June 2019
  • {{URL | url = https://jacobinmag.com/2019/08/uber-koch-brothers-david-charles-rideshare-public-transit}} {{DES | des = "Uber and the Kochs aren't often mentioned in the same sentence. But the rideshar
    6 KB (959 words) - 14:32, 21 September 2019
  • [[Category:Uber]] {{URL | url = https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/10/uber-copter-symptom-inequality-disease/599584/}}
    9 KB (1,503 words) - 00:44, 20 November 2019
  • [[Category:Uber]] ...ally, if invisibly, eroding long-won victories in public safety." Such as Uber and vaping. "The technology sector’s global conquest rests partly on its
    26 KB (4,134 words) - 00:49, 20 November 2019
  • ...estruction before. But we’ve never seen companies quite this good at it. Uber set a new (low) bar with $68 billion spread across only twelve thousand emp ...s,” in other words, contractors. Keeping them off the payroll means that Uber’s investors and twelve thousand white-collar employees do not share any o
    43 KB (7,165 words) - 21:44, 20 November 2019
  • ...and — one that I've not seen mentioned elsewhere. It is that none of her uber role-model characters, at any level or in any way, ever indulge in the most
    29 KB (4,767 words) - 22:16, 20 November 2019
  • ...cture used in the sharing economy (e.g. ride-sharing apps such as Lyft and Uber (Azevedo and Weyl, 2016; P. Cohen et al., 2016; Cramer and Krueger, 2016; J In parallel, ride-sharing companies such as Lyft and Uber have used smartphone-based networks to supplant classical taxi technologies
    116 KB (15,579 words) - 15:19, 31 January 2020
  • ...f Seamless and Uber. Experimentation is part of that control. We know that Uber experiments on drivers. Pearson experimented on students by adding differen You describe Uber’s entry into New York as blatant predatory behavior that used to be illeg
    11 KB (1,924 words) - 14:03, 12 October 2020
  • ... the informal, contingent, and gig workforce would ensure that nannies and Uber drivers have the same protections as office employees and construction work
    9 KB (1,406 words) - 20:02, 2 November 2020
  • ... rights even comes up, eating paleo, drinking Soylent, calling in rides on Uber, reading lots of blogs, calling American football “sportsball”, getting
    54 KB (9,010 words) - 00:03, 17 December 2020
  • ...y of this data than to make an unauthorized copy of it. That way, only the uber-nerds and the cash- poor/time rich classes will bother to copy instead of b
    135 KB (20,980 words) - 19:16, 1 February 2021

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