The Mercury News

Uber wants to know if you’re drunk

Company applies for patent to find out if customers are sober or not

- By Rachel Siegel

Ever struggled to hold a phone steady while ordering an Uber?

What about plugging typos into a pickup or drop off address?

Those are some of the flags Uber could one day use to predict whether its riders have had too much to drink.

Uber has a pending applicatio­n with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office for the technology that would help the ride-hailing giant tell drunk riders from sober ones. The idea is still in its early stages, and the company has no immediate plans to start using the technology as described in the applicatio­n.

But as with other uses of artificial intelligen­ce, the technology also raises questions of how it would actually work, and how Uber could use and store data on the health and lifestyle choices of its users. Some privacy experts caution against how the technology could misfire and discrimina­te against certain passengers, including with those physical disabiliti­es. And they worry that the technology could deter riders who are actually drunk from using the service — and risk getting behind the wheel.

“We are always exploring ways that our technology can help improve the Uber experience for riders and drivers,” said Jodi Page, an Uber spokespers­on. “We file patent applicatio­ns on many ideas, but not all of them actually become products or features.”

Uber’s patent applicatio­n, which was initially filed in December 2016, says that when riders request a car, the system collects informatio­n about the rider’s activity and includes that data in the ride request. To predict a rider’s state, the system compares data from that ride request to past ones. Past trip informatio­n may be used to “identify how the user activity of the current trip request deviates from previous (or ‘normal’) behavior for that user,” the applicatio­n says.

For example, the system may track how many typos appear in a new ride request, or the angle at which the rider holds a phone when hailing an Uber.

Based on how the system interprets that behavior, it may adjust how it arranges a match with a driver, the applicatio­n said.

“Some examples of trip variations include matching the user with only certain [drivers], alerting a [driver] about the user’s possible unusual state, and modifying pickup or dropoff locations to areas that are well lit and easy to access,” the applicatio­n said.

The applicatio­n also notes that “when the likelihood is comparativ­ely very high” that a rider is acting out of the ordinary, that rider may not be matched with any driver, or may only be matched with drivers “with experience or training with users having an unusual state.” And when the likelihood is comparativ­ely low, the system may match riders “normally.”

It’s still unclear how the patent, if approved, would be applied, and whether Uber would make use of it at all. But the patent applicatio­n alone raised questions of its potential shortcomin­gs and dangers.

John Simpson, director of the Privacy Project at the nonprofit Consumer Watchdog, said use of the technology could damage Uber’s business model given that many riders rely on the service after drinking and when they know it would be unsafe to drive.

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