Uh uh Uber ur Deaths are More than Unite the R

AZGAL

Gold Member
Oct 3, 2016
4,074
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Arid Zona
UBER
corporate hypocrites
So many deaths, lawsuits, accidents, rapes, problems...
The end uf Uber self driving test in AZ as Uber fatal accident
Take a different ride

http://www.whosdrivingyou.org/rideshare-incidents
Who's Driving You?
Organization
Ridesharing Incidents
Reported List of Incidents
Involving Uber and Lyft


Uber’s process for onboarding drivers is dangerously negligent. Neither Uber nor Lyft uses fingerprints or law enforcement to background-check their drivers. And Uber doesn’t even bother to meet with drivers in person before allowing them to ferry passengers.

The result is a series of incidents involving “ridesharing” passengers being harmed and criminal offenders behind the wheel:
Deaths | Assaults | Sexual Assaults | Kidnappings | Felons | Imposters | Other Serious Incidents

How risky is your Uber ride? Maybe more than you think via @CNET
Self-driving Uber kills Arizona woman in first fatal crash involving pedestrian
Uber driver convicted of raping female passenger, faces 20 years in prison Uber driver convicted of raping female passenger, faces 20 years in prison
 
th
 
Uber to pay $148 million for failing to report 2016 hack
The ride-hailing company reaches a settlement with all 50
states and DC.
  • c-net
September 26, 2018 12:48 PM PDT

Uber has reached a settlement with all 50 US states and the District of Columbia over a 2016 data breach the ride-hailing service failed to disclose.

The company will pay a $148 million fine that will be distributed in varying amounts across all states, attorneys general said Wednesday. Uber will also be required to adopt several new data security practices.

"Uber's decision to cover up this breach was a blatant violation of the public's trust," Attorney General Becerra said in a statement. "The company failed to safeguard user data and notify authorities when it was exposed. Consistent with its corporate culture at the time, Uber swept the breach under the rug in deliberate disregard of the law."

In October 2016, hackers were able to breach Uber's system and steal data on 57 million drivers and riders. The pilfered data included personal information such as names, email addresses and driver's license numbers, but not Social Security numbers and credit card information. Uber then paid $100,000 to the data thieves to delete the information.

The issue for the state attorneys general was that Uber waited for more than a year to disclose the hack. The law requires companies to notify customers of data breaches.

"Uber failed to notify law enforcement and the public of the breach," Becerra said at a press conference Wednesday. "Protecting the privacy of their customers isn't only the right thing to do, it's the law."
 

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