Google eyes driverless ride sharing

Waze Carpool connects riders and drivers with nearly identical commutes based on their home and work addresses.

Waze Carpool connects riders and drivers with nearly identical commutes based on their home and work addresses.

Published May 18, 2016

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Washington DC - Google's launch of a carpooling service this week marks the beginning of its seemingly inevitable entry into the ridesharing wars.

The pilot program, which is being offered via Google's Waze navigation app, aims to connect commuters who need a ride with drivers who can supply one. In exchange, riders will help cover the drivers' fuel costs. Consolidating rides means fewer cars on the road - which is better for traffic congestion and the environment, according to Waze.

“Waze Carpool connects riders and drivers with nearly identical commutes based on their home and work addresses,” the company says in a section of its website.

“Thanks to Waze advanced mapping capabilities, the platform connects carpool partners from the same local community.”

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The invite-only service is being introduced at first to 25 000 people who work for Adobe and Wal-Mart in the San Francisco area, according to the Wall Street Journal. Carpool riders will need to download a separate app, called Waze Rider, which is designed to interact with Waze's primary app for drivers.

As the Journal notes, Uber and Google have had a complicated relationship; in 2013, Google Ventures invested hundreds of millions of dollars into Uber but the two companies have since grown apart as Uber has matured.

The Google-backed carpool experiment differs significantly from some of the biggest companies in the ride-hailing industry, such as Uber and Lyft, which are explicitly designed to provide drivers with a supplementary source of income. These mainstream companies also tout the work flexibility that their drivers enjoy; whether it's serving weekday commuters or late-night partygoers, the contractors can choose to drive during the times that suit them best.

First step

By contrast, Waze Carpool drivers won't be paid - at least for now - beyond the 54 cents per mile (R8.50) that riders will be charged for fuel and other routine expenses. And Waze Carpool will only be available to users twice a day, during the morning and evening rush hours.

Still, the offering represents an important first step by Google into ridesharing, one that sets the stage for a future service that could potentially involve not just human drivers, but self-driving cars.

“Google is laying the groundwork for an autonomous vehicle economy,” said Karl Brauer, an analyst at Kelley Blue Book.

In April Uber, Google and Ford launched a coalition aimed at pushing driverless vehicles to market. And combined with the driver data being gathered from the thousands of trips Waze Carpool may make over the coming months, Google's own research into vehicle automation and artificial intelligence will probably create the right conditions for an expansion into driverless ridesharing.

Washington Post

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