I am not a fan of the medallion system, but Uber does seem to impact the businesses of traditional, local cab drivers while raking in profits on a global scale.
It looks like a perfect middle-class job destroying operation that centralizes profits in one multinational company.
As someone put it, those with the more powerful computers will win the economic spoils.
I think there should be an UBER competitor ,that really helps cities build their own clone effectively.
If that's possible politically , it would be interesting : the cities would have regulatory power to win over UBER, this very critical business that's might just be the future of transport will be in public hands and hopefully will be guided to the good of the community, and drivers will be compensated fairly.
As someone who regularly uses taxis in Melbourne, I don't care if it destroys the lives of taxi drivers. That's just another perk of switching to uber in my opinion.
And as someone who uses them on the Gold Coast and in Brisbane, I'm right there with you. A corrupt industry, where the drivers are being completely screwed over as-is, and a few people at the top rake in all the money... basically, the same as Uber, only Uber is cheaper and has nicer cars.
It looks like a perfect middle-class job destroying operation that centralizes profits in one multinational company.
As someone put it, those with the more powerful computers will win the economic spoils.