Dayton Daily News

Feds looking into Uber spyware allegation­s

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legal pressure on the company, federal prosecutor­s and FBI agents in Manhattan have been investigat­ing a program nicknamed “Hell” at Uber that allegedly allowed the company to spy on drivers from competing service Lyft, according to the people.

The program was said to identify drivers who worked for both firmsand target them with cash incentives to shift their allegiance to Uber. The program was allegedly used 2014-16, the people said.

U.S. authoritie­s are already investigat­ing the company on two other fronts: another program nicknamed “Greyball,” which was allegedly used to deceive regulators about its operations; and possible violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which bans payments of bribes to foreign officials.

The Greyball investigat­ion is being overseen by federal prosecutor­s in San Francisco, while the foreign payment case is being handled out of Justice Department headquarte­rs in Washington.

Matt Kallman, a spokesman for Uber, said the company is cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion, and the Hell program is no longer being used. Representa­tives for the FBI and Acting U.S. Attorney Joon Kim in Manhattan declined to comment on the probe.

Lyft drivers filed a class-action lawsuit against Uber over the Hell program in San Francisco federal court in April. A judge granted Uber’s request to dismiss the case last month, but allowed it to be revised and refiled.

Closely held Uber has been beset by legal and regulatory scrutiny across a range of its practices, contributi­ng to the pressure that ultimately resulted in the resignatio­n of co-founder and former CEO Travis Kalanick in June.

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