Are Uber screen cars just phantoms?

The Uber car service has been banned in Berlin. Photo: Paul J. Richards.

The Uber car service has been banned in Berlin. Photo: Paul J. Richards.

Published Jul 29, 2015

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New York - A swarm of vehicles apparently circling your location is intended to act as an incentive to book an Uber car. But the little black on-screen symbols are sometimes “phantoms” that bear little relation to actual Uber drivers in the vicinity, an investigation into the company has alleged.

Uber drivers in the US have claimed that the smartphone-based car service often displays “phantom cars”, which are not actually circling the location, when customers request a journey, according to research.

However, the allegation that the app displays a “visual representation” rather than the real-time position of cars in the proximity was categorically denied by Uber's UK office.

Research from Alex Rosenblat, a New York-based data researcher who studied how Uber drivers interact with the Uber app, alleges that Uber customers are manipulated by the symbols on their screens.

DECEPTIVE

“If a potential passenger opened up the app and saw no cars around, she might take another cab service. But if she saw a cluster of cars seemingly milling around on the same street, she's more likely to request a ride,” wrote Mr Rosenblat, whose research - funded by Microsoft - is published on Vice magazine's Motherboard blog.

“What the passenger app shows can be deceptive,” writes Mr Rosenblat, who found that Uber drivers “across multiple forums discuss the fake cars they see on their own residential streets”.

He quoted Heather, an Uber driver, who once opened the passenger app to find four drivers on the streets immediately by her pick-up location. Her driver app, however, showed that the closest available vehicle appeared to be 17 minutes away, by Uber's estimate.

When Heather questioned Uber about the discrepancy, she was told the app merely displayed a “screen saver”. “The app is simply showing there are partners on the road at the time,” a company representative told her in an email.

But a UK spokesman for Uber said: “This is simply not true. The cars you see in the app are the cars on the road.”

The Independent

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