The Sun (Malaysia)

Uber execs on world ride to reassure regulators after spate of controvers­ies

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TOKYO: Uber executives are travelling the globe to reassure regulators that the company is changing the way it does business, after a string of controvers­ies hurt the ride-hailing firm’s reputation, its Asian head said yesterday.

These comments come on the heels of Uber’s disclosure last week that it covered up a 2016 data breach which compromise­d data of some 57 million customers and drivers, prompting government­s around the world to launch probes into the breach and Uber’s handling of the matter.

Authoritie­s in Britain and the United States, two top Uber markets, as well as Australia and the Philippine­s have said they would investigat­e the company’s response to the data breach.

“We’ve learned very quickly and we’re tacking very quickly,” Brooks Entwistle, Uber Technologi­es Inc’s recently appointed chief business officer for Asia Pacific, told Reuters.

“We have changed tacks in so many ways in dealing with regulators, dealing with government­s,” he said at the company’s offices in Tokyo where he is meeting Japanese regulators.

A stream of executives have left Uber in recent months amid controvers­ies involving sexual harassment, data privacy and business practices in Asia. The board also removed Travis Kalanick as its CEO in June.

Entwistle joined Uber in August after stints as CEO of an India- and Southeast Asia-focused private equity and real estate investment firm Everstone Group and chairman of Goldman Sachs’s Southeast Asian business.

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