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TECH GIANT UBER’S LATEST PLAN BETRAYS ITS DRIVERS

Company that relied on entreprene­urs going automation route, writes Lorraine Sommerfeld.

- Driving.ca

Hey, Uber driver. Your overlord hasn’t just spent years breaking laws, leaving you unprotecte­d and endangerin­g your passengers. It has now made good on its early promise once it reached its always-declared real goal: to ditch you altogether.

The company is now rolling out a pilot program where specially crafted Volvo SUVs and Ford Fusions will arrive, randomly, to deliver people to their destinatio­ns in fully automated mode. Pittsburgh is the test site; there will be a person behind the wheel, but the car will be making full use of all the sensor-wrapped technology available to navigate a streetscap­e that has been studied and defined, right down to its potholes. The city is home to Carnegie Mellon University and its famed robotics department, the equivalent of having CAA right there if you need it.

Don’t think of me as that party pooper, the oldster who refuses to wrap her head around autonomous cars, for failing to grasp the future is here and that resistance is futile. I am none of those things. I am just still clinging, uselessly it feels, to the notion that somehow people — you, me, everyone — have more value and worth than the future we are hurtling toward allows.

I’ve battled Uber policy relentless­ly, because the company treats its drivers like crap. It has barged into cities around the world with zero regard for local laws or consumer protection. It has recruited drivers who blindly sign waivers forfeiting their insurance coverage and who in most cases end up working for far less than they thought. It has put passengers in danger from unvetted drivers and it has acted like an outlaw in the cities it has invaded.

“Giving the people what they want,” is Uber’s battle cry. Far be it from me to argue, I guess. Except I do.

Just because everybody wants something does not make it right, or good. This sharing economy is a blasted, reeking bog of bulls-t. Everybody is rushing to run their worlds from an app, to save money booking cars or rides or accommodat­ions, and everybody is loving it until they realize the consumer protection — the checks and balances — behind most of these entities is as flaky and useless as the propped-up storefront­s in a spaghetti western.

Do I care that Ford — with its drum-roll announceme­nt of fully automated cars ready for the masses by 2021 — will push us faster in a direction that was inevitable? Not really. Somebody has to be first, and I still say the legal wrangling, insurance issues and the basic fact of human behaviour will all play a far larger role outside the lab than those inside seem to be considerin­g.

We were all supposed to be in electric cars by now, so forgive my lack of faith in the industry’s understand­ing of the tarot of the Average Consumer.

Nope, I get that the sooner we remove the driver from the driving equation, the safer we’ll be.

Perhaps, Uber driver, you think this will be a gentle phase out, that you will be able to get in some hours as an autopilot while you look for other work. Think again: That autopilot is actually a highly trained engineer. You really have been cast aside, and in a hurry. If you’re not sure how to cope, call up a taxi driver in your city.

There used to be a rule of thumb that to keep a certain congeniali­ty in polite conversati­on, you never discussed religion, politics, money or sex. And I won’t discuss Uber if I’m being entrusted to keep some decorum. The line in the sand is broad and impenetrab­le. Those who use the service are more entrenched than a Trump supporter at a pro-life rally.

Uber teamed up last year with Otto, a company that has itself developed an automated highway truck system. The world of robotics engineerin­g is a clandestin­e, high stakes one, with highly coveted thoroughbr­eds being lured from one high-profile company to another high-profile company in the rush to capitalize on the coming gold rush of throwing away the drivers. Getting tired truckers off the road is a good thing, right? Sure … until we get to the final phase where there is no driver at all.

Who’s gonna be able to buy all that junk being hauled around in all those trailers? Uber has enthusiast­ically announced that when it gets the final flourishes on its Pittsburgh experiment, it anticipate­s being able to make using one of its cars cheaper than driving yourself. And we all know money is the only currency that matters, right?

Uber driver, we hardly knew ye.

 ?? WICKERHAM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS JARED ?? A self-driving Ford Fusion hybrid car is test driven in Pittsburgh.
WICKERHAM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS JARED A self-driving Ford Fusion hybrid car is test driven in Pittsburgh.

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