Uber used secret tool to
evade authorities
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[March 04, 2017]
(Reuters) - Ride services company
Uber Technologies Inc [UBER.UL] for years has used a secret tool to
avoid authorities in markets where its service faced resistance by law
enforcement or was banned, the company confirmed on Friday.
The New York Times first reported the existence of the program, called
Greyball, which uses data from the Uber app and other methods to
identify and circumvent officials who aimed to ticket or apprehend
drivers in cities that opposed its operations.
Rides hailed from a location near a city enforcement agency suspected of
launching a sting to trap Uber drivers could be ignored or canceled, for
instance, the Times report said. (http://nyti.ms/2mmTS88)
The tool allowed Uber to show images of "ghost" Uber cars on the app or
show that no cars were available, according to the newspaper, in order
to deceive authorities. Officials in certain cities without a legal
framework for ride services have aimed to ticket, tow and impound the
cars.
A spokeswoman for Uber said Greyball was still in use, though scaled
back. It grew out of an effort to protect the app from disruption by
competitors and drivers from abuse and, in more rare cases, was also
used where there were enforcement stings, she said.
Meanwhile, Uber's best-known security researcher and vice president of
product and growth resigned on Friday, without giving reasons. It was
unclear if the departures were connected to Greyball.
Revelations about the Greyball program come after a series of events
bringing Uber's practices into doubt that has raised customer and
investor concern.
Those include allegations of sexual harassment that prompted an internal
investigation at the company, a video of Chief Executive Travis Kalanick
arguing with an Uber driver that led him to make a public apology and
pledge to "grow up", and a lawsuit by Alphabet Inc's self-driving car
unit, Waymo, accusing Uber of stealing designs for technology for
autonomous cars. Uber has said Waymo's claims are false.
In an email, Uber said the Greyball program "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."
The tactic had been scaled back considerably as the company won the
right to operate in more places, a spokeswoman added.
She said that Uber’s legal department had approved the practice in
locations where Uber was not clearly banned, and that Uber's terms of
use required riders use the ride hailing app for personal, not
commercial, reasons and to not cause "nuisance" to drivers.
The program is still being used when drivers are under threat of arrest
or other legal punishment in some cities within 15 U.S. states without
clear ride-sharing laws, she said, adding that she did not know in which
other countries the system is being used.
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A photo illustration shows the Uber app logo displayed on a mobile
telephone, as it is held up for a posed photograph in central
London, Britain October 28, 2016. REUTERS/Toby
Melville/Illustration/Files
A source earlier on Friday had told Reuters that the program had not been in use
in the United States for more than a year.
The New York Times said Uber used the methods to evade authorities in cities
including Boston, Paris and Las Vegas, and in countries such as Australia,
China, Italy and South Korea.
Once the Greyball tool was put in place and tested, Uber engineers created a
playbook with a list of tactics, which included looking up city officials on
social media and obtaining phone numbers of cheap phones that Uber calculated
enforcement officials were likely to buy, the Times said. Local officials on
Friday expressed concern about Uber’s practices but stopped short of saying they
would take action.
“We take any effort to undermine our efforts to protect the public very
seriously,” Dylan Rivera, a spokesman for the Portland, Oregon transportation
bureau, said in a statement. “We will closely examine the evidence presented in
this investigation to see if it warrants changes in our approach to consumer
protection.”
Boston police Lieutenant Mike McCarthy said his department would also review the
allegations and Philadelphia Parking Authority spokesman Martin O’Rourke said
his agency was aware of Uber’s attempts to evade local inspectors and the
activity was covered by a settlement agreement that the authority and the
company signed last year, in which Uber paid a $350,000 fine.
Greyball, which began as early as 2014, was part of a program called "Violation
of terms of service" (VTOS), aimed at finding people the ride-hailing company
thought were using the app improperly, the New York Times reported.
Two high-level departures on Friday added to Uber's woes. Ed Baker, Uber’s vice
president of product and growth, is leaving the company after nearly four years,
an Uber spokeswoman said, declining to provide a reason.
Also announcing his departure Friday was the best-known security researcher at
Uber. Charlie Miller, who won fame beyond the security industry for hacking into
a Jeep as it was driving, said on Twitter that he was leaving after a year and a
half of working on security for autonomous driving. He said he would announce
where he was headed next week.
(Reporting by Laharee Chatterjee in Bengaluru, Joseph Menn, David Ingram and
Heather Somerville in San Francisco; Editing by Anil D'Silva, Peter Henderson
and Bill Rigby)
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