Jamaica Gleaner

Feds probe Uber’s alleged use of fake app

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THE UNITED States Justice Department is probing allegation­s that Uber used phoney software to thwart city officials looking at whether the ride-hailing company was following local regulation­s.

The city of Portland, Oregon, said in an April audit report that it was notified of the federal inquiry by the US Attorney’s Office in San Francisco. Portland says it is cooperatin­g. Uber and the US Attorney’s Office both declined to comment.

Reuters and other news outlets have reported that the investigat­ion is a criminal probe currently before a grand jury.

Uber’s software — nicknamed “Greyball” — identified regulators who posed as riders while trying to collect evidence that Uber’s service was breaking taxi laws. Uber allegedly served up a fake version of its app to make it appear that the undercover regulators were summoning a car, only to have the ride cancelled.

Portland officials began investigat­ing Uber after the New York Times disclosed the existence of Greyball in March. “The city of Portland was notified by the United States Attorney of the Northern District of California that Uber is the subject of a federal inquiry,” the audit report stated.

In the audit report, the Portland Bureau of Transporta­tion found that Uber tagged 17 rider accounts with Greyball, 16 of which were government officials. Uber used the software to “intentiona­lly evade” city transporta­tion officers between December 5 and December 19, 2014, the report said.

The company pulled out of Portland on December 21, 2014, but returned late in April of 2015. After that, the audit found no evidence that Uber used Greyball, the report stated.

“Finding no evidence of the use of Greyball or similar software tools after April 2015 does not prove definitive­ly that such tools were not used. It is inherently difficult to prove a negative,” the report said.

Uber said in an April 21 letter to the city that its own investigat­ion indicated that Greyball was used “exceedingl­y sparingly” in Portland. The company said that it removed all Greyball tags in Portland back in April 2015 and has not used them since.

Uber has acknowledg­ed that it used Greyball to counter regulators working with the company’s opponents to entrap its drivers. It was part of a broader programme called VTOS, shorthand for “violations of terms of service,” that Uber says it developed to protect its service.

“This programme denies ride requests to fraudulent users who are violating our terms of service — whether that’s people aiming to physically harm drivers, competitor­s looking to disrupt our operations, or opponents who collude with officials on secret ‘stings’ meant to entrap drivers,” Uber said.

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