• Lyft to launch Mobileye-powered robotaxis as soon as 2026, starting with Dallas
    techcrunch.com
    Ride-hail giant Lyft plans to bring fully autonomous robotaxis, powered by Mobileye, to its app as soon as 2026 in Dallas, with more markets to follow, TechCrunch has exclusively learned.The news comes a day before Lyft shares its fourth-quarter and full-year 2024 earnings report, and it coincides with Waymos preparations to launch a commercial robotaxi service in partnership with Uber in Austin and, later, Atlanta. Tesla has also shared plans to start an autonomous ride-hail operation in Austin in June.Marubeni, a Japanese conglomerate with experience managing fleets, will own and finance the Mobileye-equipped vehicles that will show up on Lyfts ride-hailing app. While Lyft has not yet disclosed its OEM partner for the launch, Mobileyes advanced driver assistance technology is already integrated into vehicles from Audi, Volkswagen, Nissan, Ford, General Motors, and more.Lyft also didnt share how many vehicles it would launch in Dallas to start, but Jeremy Bird, Lyfts chief policy officer, told TechCrunch that the plan is to scale to thousands of vehicles across multiple cities after Lyfts Texas debut.The Marubeni partnership feels a little like a non sequitur for Lyft; the company owns subsidiaries across almost every industry, from food and real estate to agriculture and energy, but doesnt have a large presence in ride-hail or autonomous vehicles. That said, over the past few years, Marubeni has begun to dabble. In 2021, the company partnered with Mobileye and transit planning app Moovit to launch an on-demand mobility service in Japan. TechCrunch has reached out to learn if that collaboration is still active. Mobileye actually served as the intermediary between Lyft and Marubeni, said Bird. And for Lyfts asset-light business model, finding a partner to commit to owning the fleet of vehicles is crucial.Mobileyes got the technology and the relationship with the OEMs, and we have the platform, so its the ownership of the fleet thats the big missing piece, Bird told TechCrunch. And when you have somebody that has experience in [fleet management] and the resources and the willingness to be a first-mover, that changes the game for us.Marubeni will leverage Lyfts Flexdrive service to help manage its fleet and keep asset utilization high. Flexdrive is Lyfts service to connect drivers who dont own vehicles with rental cars. Bird says Lyfts experience managing fleets which includes charging, cleaning, and maintaining the vehicles, as well as real estate for operations will go a long way towards supporting future autonomous rides.Bird noted that Lyft is in talks with every major autonomy player about bringing them onto the platform. And Lyft probably wants to kick those conversations into gear as its main competitor Uber snatches up partnerships with other AV companies. Aside from Waymo, Uber has announced deals with Wayve, Avride, Serve Robotics, Nuro, Aurora Innovation, Waabi, and others.Outside of its Mobileye deal, Lyft has only announced plans to launch AVs with May Mobility in Atlanta this year.Lyfts slower roll towards autonomy isnt for lack of trying, though. The company has had its share of bad luck in the AV arena.Lyft previously partnered with startups Motional and Argo AI to launch robotaxi services in Las Vegas initially with a human safety driver behind the wheel, but the plan was to go fully driverless. Then Motional paused that partnership in May after slashing its workforce, and Argo AI shut down in 2022. Lyft had a stake in Argo, and took a $135.7 million hit when the company folded.Before that, Lyft had tried to develop autonomous vehicle technology in-house. Uber did the same. Both sold their AV units; Uber to Aurora in December 2020, and Lyft to Toyotas Woven Planet in April 2021.Bird acknowledged that Ubers spree of AV partnerships does create urgency, but he said it also signals that the deployment of robotaxis wont be concentrated with just one company.He said Lyfts goal now is to build solid partnerships both with companies developing AV tech and with companies that want to own fleets of autonomous vehicles, which aligns with Lyfts asset-light business model.The rest of the value chain is where we really want to play a role, and thats in fleet management, demand generation, and marketplace, Bird said.
    0 Kommentare ·0 Anteile ·25 Ansichten
  • Wicked: Doctor Dillamond VFX Breakdown by Framestore
    www.artofvfx.com
    Breakdown & ShowreelsWicked: Doctor Dillamond VFX Breakdown by FramestoreBy Vincent Frei - 10/02/2025 Discover how Framestore brought Doctor Dillamond to life in Wicked! From intricate animation to seamless integration, this VFX breakdown highlights the expertise behind one of the films most captivating characters!WANT TO KNOW MORE?Framestore: Dedicated page about Wicked on Framestore website. Vincent Frei The Art of VFX 2025
    0 Kommentare ·0 Anteile ·26 Ansichten
  • ASTM receives $2.1 million funding for sustainable additive manufacturing
    3dprintingindustry.com
    ASTM International, a global standards organization, has been awarded $2.1 million by America Makes to advance sustainability in 3D printing.We are pleased to lead this important project with America Makes, said Mohsen Seifi, ASTMs Vice President of Global Advanced Manufacturing. Our focus will be on developing methodologies that eventually promote the sustainable use of materials in additive manufacturing, ensuring both environmental benefits and high-quality outcomes for end users.The consortium includes Boeing, ADDMAN, Amaero Advanced Materials and Manufacturing, and the Additive Manufacturer Green Trade Association (AMGTA).Advancing sustainable practices in additive manufacturing is crucial for the future of aerospace and other industries, said Melissa Orme, Vice President of Additive Manufacturing at Boeing. This project represents a major step toward achieving those goals by addressing full lifecycle assessment and sustainable design considerationsReuse and recycling of Additive Manufacturing materialsThe project will focus on developing methodologies for reutilizing and recycling AM materials while ensuring sustainable design strategies that meet end users quality and performance standards. It will explore strategies for material recovery, lifecycle assessments, and frameworks to help manufacturers adopt eco-friendly practices without compromising part performance or reliability.The research will build on ASTMs expertise in AM standards, qualification, certification, and sustainability, ensuring that the findings contribute to industry-wide best practices and regulatory guidelines. Through this project, ASTM and its partners will help drive solutions that align with circular economy principles and enhance the long-term viability of AM in industrial applications.Sustainability and Additive ManufacturingSustainability is a noble goal, and structured research into the quantifiable benefits of AM in this domain is welcome. As the industry matures, initial proclamations that AM is an inherently green technology have been, for the most part, replaced by more reasoned voices for caution against such blanket statements. For example, Dr. Phil Reeves has presented detailed research on the sustainable nature of 3D printing, highlighting energy consumption at different process stages.Furthermore, enterprises in the industry are also taking steps to meet sustainability goals. For example, Stratasys released its third Mindful Manufacturing ESG and Sustainability Report to showcase its progress in sustainable additive manufacturing. The company has significantly reduced its environmental footprint, consuming 778,365 kWh of renewable energy and cutting greenhouse gas emissions intensity by 15.5%, alongside an 11.7% reduction in water intensity. It expanded its Certified Pre-Owned printer program and secured ISO 14001 certification in Israel and the EMEA region. Social initiatives included an Equal Parent Policy, boosting parental leave participation, and extensive employee training, with engagement reaching 73%. Additionally, Stratasys launched a Strategic Industrial Customer Advisory Board to enhance collaboration with key clients.3D Printing Industry is hosting alive webinar to preview the 2025 AMUG Conference. Join us and our guests on Wednesday, 12th February.Subscribe to the 3D Printing Industry newsletter for the latest news in additive manufacturing. You can also stay connected by following us on LinkedIn.Andleeb KhanAndleeb Khan is an experienced journalist and editor specializing in climate change, technology, social issues and others. With over a decade of experience, she has developed a keen eye for storytelling with impact and in-depth analysis. Passionate about making complex topics accessible, her work highlights critical environmental and technological developments.
    0 Kommentare ·0 Anteile ·27 Ansichten
  • Fellowship by Life Architecture: A Contemporary Reflection on Kews Post-War Legacy
    archeyes.com
    Fellowship Residence | Timothy KayeKew, Victoria, holds a special place in Australias architectural history, particularly in the post-war period. Studley Park, an enclave within Kew, is home to a remarkable collection of mid-century residential architecture designed by influential architects such as Robin Boyd, John and Phyllis Murphy, and Guilford Bell. Their work established a distinct architectural language characterized by restrained modernism, strong material presence, and an intimate relationship between built form and landscape.Fellowship Residence Technical InformationArchitects1-2: Life ArchitectureLocation: Kew, Victoria, AustraliaArea: 120 to 250m2 Apartments | 1,291 Sq. Ft. to 2,690 Sq. Ft.Project Year: 2020 2024Photographs: Timothy KayeOur design outcome is one of beautifully detailed interiors with a timeless and sophisticated colour palette. This allows the end user to curate their space to suit their lifestyle. Life Architecture ArchitectsFellowship Residence Photographs Timothy Kaye Timothy Kaye Timothy Kaye Timothy Kaye Timothy Kaye Timothy Kaye Timothy Kaye Timothy KayeArchitectural Design and Spatial QualitiesWithin this historically significant setting, Fellowship by Life Architecture emerges as a contemporary reinterpretation of these architectural ideals. Developed in collaboration with SORA Interiors and landscape architect Jack Merlo, the project consists of two low-rise apartment buildings set within lush gardens. Designed as house-sized apartments for a downsizing demographic, Fellowship engages with both its historic context and contemporary demands, raising important questions about architectural continuity, materiality, and spatial experience.One of the most striking aspects of Fellowship is its scale and massing. Rather than imposing a singular large volume onto the 1,500-square-meter site, the architects opted for two distinct three-level buildings. This decision reduces the projects visual impact, maintaining the intimate scale of the surrounding neighborhood. The articulation of form through recessed and projected elements, along with carefully placed apertures, enhances the projects human scale and fosters a sense of belonging within the streetscape.In contrast to conventional apartment designs, Fellowship adopts a spatial strategy that borrows heavily from single-family home typologies. Each residence features a well-defined entrance, reminiscent of traditional domestic layouts. The inclusion of dual living spaces, expansive open-plan areas, and seamless transitions to outdoor terraces reflects an ambition to craft dwellings that prioritize comfort, flexibility, and a strong connection to nature.Additionally, the three penthouses, each featuring landscaped rooftop gardens and private swimming pools, reinforce the theme of bringing suburban luxuries into an urban context. The project aims to provide the benefits of a single-family homeprivacy, space, and architectural characterwithin a multi-residential framework that allows for a more compact and sustainable lifestyle.Material selection plays a crucial role in Fellowships architectural identity. The use of brick, both as structure and ornament, ties the project to the areas post-war architectural legacy. The bris-soleil or hit-and-miss brickwork above the entrances provides texture, shade, and depth, simultaneously evoking the masonry traditions of mid-century modernism while offering a contemporary reinterpretation.Internally, the material palette shifts towards softer, more tactile finishes. Venetian-style plastered walls introduce a sense of craftsmanship and warmth, while oak parquetry flooring in the main living areas reinforces the projects emphasis on natural, enduring materials. Bathrooms are adorned with stone and marble, further enhancing the luxurious yet understated aesthetic. These material choices not only ensure longevity but also create a sense of permanence and tranquility.A Model for Future DevelopmentsFellowship represents a compelling case study in contemporary infill development. Its ability to sensitively engage with Kews architectural heritage while providing high-end residential solutions exemplifies the potential for well-crafted, contextually aware multi-residential architecture. The project demonstrates the value of human-scaled massing, material integrity, and spatial generosity in creating meaningful living environments.While Fellowship succeeds in offering a refined and contextually integrated design, it also highlights some of the broader tensions in luxury residential architecture. The balance between exclusivity and urban contribution, the depth of heritage engagement, and the need for stronger sustainability measures are all areas that warrant further exploration.As cities continue to evolve, projects like Fellowship must navigate the complex intersection of history, modernity, and environmental responsibility. Whether this development will serve as a model for future infill housing or remain an isolated instance of boutique residential refinement remains to be seen.Fellowship Residence Image GalleryAbout Life ArchitectureLife Architecture is an Australian firm known for its thoughtful, context-driven designs that balance contemporary aesthetics with heritage sensitivity. Specializing in high-end residential and boutique multi-residential projects, the firm emphasizes material integrity, spatial refinement, and a strong connection to the surrounding environment. Through meticulous craftsmanship and a focus on livability, Life Architecture creates enduring spaces that seamlessly blend modern luxury with architectural tradition.Credits and Additional NotesInterior Designer: SORA InteriorsLandscape Architect: Jack MerloDeveloper: Zynergy PropertyConstruction Company: VCONSite Area: 1,500 square metersTotal Apartments: 10Apartment Sizes: 120 250 square meters
    0 Kommentare ·0 Anteile ·29 Ansichten
  • In Brooklyn, Plan Plan merges contrasting materials for Fujianese restaurant Nin Hao
    www.archpaper.com
    Opposites AttractIn Brooklyn, Plan Plan merges contrasting materials for Fujianese restaurant Nin HaoByPaige Davidson February 10, 2025East, Interiors (Sean Davidson)SHAREThe name of architecture and design firm Plan Plan is simply a repetition of two wordsbut how to read it? Are they intended as nouns, verbs, or one of each? Elucidating the name and ethos behind the firm,Plan Plancollectively shared, To us architectural practice is a process of negotiation between different economical, cultural, and social forces. This holds true for the firms recent project, a Fujianese restaurant in New York, Nin Hao. The restaurant as the firm shared, is a singular space but allows different things to happen at the same time. The 1,800-square-foot restaurant is located within a new mixed-use building on Dean Street in Brooklyns Prospect Heights. The buildings glass wall wraps around the corner, so the restaurant appears to glow against the structures black metal frame. Just behind the glass, a display of sheer Austrian curtains form a scallop pattern across the storefront. Below it, passerby can peek into the bustling restaurant. As the firm toldAN Interior, Rather than being a transparent space understood at a single glance from the storefront, it evolves into a vibrant, dynamic scenea Sidewalk Ballet that engages and invites passersby.Read more about the restaurant on aninteriormag.com. BrooklynRestaurants
    0 Kommentare ·0 Anteile ·30 Ansichten
  • Competition: Adapt Me
    www.architectural-review.com
    An international contest is inviting students to transform an urban site to mitigate the climate predicted by the end of this century (Deadline: 30 November)The contest organised by Australian Urban Design Research Centre at the University of Western Australia invites students and graduates of urban planning, architecture and landscape architecture to draw up urban climate adaptation proposals for any site in the world.Featuring a $15,000 AUD prize fund the call for concepts aims to identify a range of solutions for adapting 200m by 200m urban sites to survive the climate projected for the year 2099. Concepts may focus on any developed or undeveloped site and must respond to extreme temperature changes.Chicago urban heat islandCredit:Image by dustinphillipsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic According to the brief: The latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report paints a grim picture of climate change, predicting soaring heat stress worldwide. Globally, heat is a silent killer that is already responsible for more deaths than any other natural disaster.Worryingly, the Urban Heat Island effect can amplify city temperatures by up to 10C compared to peri-urban surroundings, posing significant health risks. Despite this, the design and planning implications of increasing temperatures on urban precincts, public open spaces and housing remain poorly understood.Preparing urban communities to be climate- ready is critical, and there is a need for innovative urban design and planning strategies to underpin urban adaptation measures.The latest contest aims to capture the public imagination by providing compelling urban design vision for a sustainable and climate-adapted future. Key aims include promoting climate-sensitive urban design techniques and showing how climate adaptation can help deliver diverse, dense and delightful neighbourhoods.A Sydney Climate Change protestCredit:Image by School Strike Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic licenseThe contest is open to tertiary students and graduates from any climate region worldwide. Multidisciplinary teams are encouraged to apply. Submissions should include a masterplan for the area in 2099, a visual showing how a typical open space or building could be adapted, and a 300-word written description.Judges will include Julian Bolleter, Director of the Australian Urban Design Research Centre; Silvia Tavares, founder and co-lead of the Bioclimatic and Sociotechnical Cities Lab at the University of the Sunshine Coast; and Andrew Lilleyman, director of ARM Architecture.Concepts will be judged on both innovation and deployment of existing climate-sensitive urban design strategies. The $15,000 AUD prize fund will be split between the best tertiary student and graduate entries.How to applyDeadline: 30 NovemberCompetition funding source: Not suppliedProject funding source: Not suppliedOwner of site(s): Not suppliedContact details: julian.bolleter@uwa.edu.auVisit the competition website for more information
    0 Kommentare ·0 Anteile ·28 Ansichten
  • Google drops pledge not to develop AI weapons
    www.computerweekly.com
    Google parent company Alphabet has dropped its pledge to not use artificial intelligence (AI) in weapons systems or surveillance tools, citing a need to support the national security of democracies.Google CEO Sundar Pichai, in a blogpost published Jun 2018, previously outlined how the company would not pursue AI applications that cause or are likely to cause overall harm, and specifically committed to not developing AI for use in weapons or other technologies whose principal purpose or implementation is to cause or directly facilitate injury to people.He added that Google would also not pursue technologies that gather or use information for surveillance violating internationally accepted norms.Google whose company motto Dont be Evil was replaced in 2015 with Do the right thing defended the decision to remove these goals from its AI principles webpage in a blogpost co-authored by Demis Hassabis, CEO of Google DeepMind; and James Manyika, the companys senior vice-president for technology and society.Theres a global competition taking place for AI leadership within an increasingly complex geopolitical landscape. We believe democracies should lead in AI development, guided by core values like freedom, equality and respect for human rights, they wrote on 4 February.And we believe that companies, governments and organisations sharing these values should work together to create AI that protects people, promotes global growth and supports national security.They added that Googles AI principles will now focus on three core tenants, including bold innovation, which aims to assist, empower, and inspire people in almost every field of human endeavour and address humanitys biggest challenges; responsible development and deployment, which means pursuing AI responsibly throughout a systems entire lifecycle; and collaborative progress, together, which is focused on empowering others to harness AI positively.Commenting on Googles policy change, Elke Schwarz a professor of political theory at Queen Mary University London and author of Death machines: The ethics of violent technologies said that while it is not at all surprising given the company has already been supplying the US military (and reportedly the IDF) with cloud services, she is still concerned about the shifting mood among big tech firms towards military AI; many of which are now arguing it is unethical not to get stuck in developing AI applications for this context.Google now feels comfortable enough to make such a substantial public change without having to face a significant backlash or repercussions gives you a sense of where we are with ethical concerns about profiteering from violence (to put it somewhat crudely). It indicates a worrying acceptance of building out a war economy, she told Computer Weekly, adding that Googles policy change highlights a clear shift that the global tech industry is now also a global military industry.It suggests an encroaching militarisation of everything. It also signals that there is a significant market position in making AI for military purposes and that there is a significant share of financial gains up for grabs for which the current top companies compete. How useful this drive is toward AI for military purposes is still very much speculative.Experts on military AI have previously raised concerns about the ethical implications of algorithmically enabled killing, including the potential for dehumanisation when people on the receiving end of lethal force are reduced to data points and numbers on a screen; the risk of discrimination during target selection due to biases in the programming or criteria used; as well as the emotional and psychological detachment of operators from the human consequences of their actions.There are also concerns over whether there can ever be meaningful human control over autonomous weapons systems (AWS), due to the combination of automation bias and how such weapons increase the velocity of warfare beyond human cognition.Throughout 2024, a range of other AI developers including OpenAI, Anthropic and Meta walked back their own AI usage policies to allow US intelligence and defence agencies use their AI systems. They still claim they do not allow their AI to harm humans.Computer Weekly contacted Google about the change including how it intends to approach AI development responsibly in the context of national security, and if it intends to place any limits on the kinds of applications its AI systems can be used in but received no response.The move by Google has attracted strong criticism, including from human rights organisations concerned about the use of AI for autonomous weapons or mass surveillance. Amnesty International, for example, has called the decision shameful and said it would set a dangerous precedent.AI-powered technologies could fuel surveillance and lethal killing systems at a vast scale, potentially leading to mass violations and infringing on the fundamental right to privacy, said Matt Mahmoudi, a researcher and adviser on AI and human rights at Amnesty.Googles decision to reverse its ban on AI weapons enables the company to sell products that power technologies including mass surveillance, drones developed for semi-automated signature strikes, and target generation software that is designed to speed up the decision to kill.Google must urgently reverse recent changes in AI principles and recommit to refraining from developing or selling systems that could enable serious human rights violations. It is also essential that state actors establish binding regulations governing the deployment of these technologies grounded in human rights principles. The facade of self-regulation perpetuated by tech companies must not distract us from urgent need to create robust legislation that protects human rights.Human Rights Watch similarly highlighted the problematic nature of self-regulation through voluntary principles.That a global industry leader like Google can suddenly abandon self-proclaimed forbidden practices underscores why voluntary guidelines are not a substitute for regulation and enforceable law. Existing international human rights law and standards do apply in the use of AI, and regulation can be crucial in translating norms into practice, it said, noting while it is unclear to what extent Google was adhering to its previous principles, Google workers have at least been able to cite them when pushing back on irresponsible AI practices.For example, in September 2022, Google workers and Palestinian activists called on the tech giant to end its involvement in the secretive Project Nimbus cloud computing contract, which involves the provision of AI and machine learning (ML) tools to the Israeli government.They specifically accused the tech giant of complicity in Israeli apartheid, and said they feared how the technology would be used against Palestinians, citing Googles own AI principles. A Google spokesperson told Computer Weekly at the time: The project includes making Google Cloud Platform available to government agencies for everyday workloads such as finance, healthcare, transportation and education, but it is not directed to highly sensitive or classified workloads.Human Rights Watch added: Googles pivot from refusing to build AI for weapons to stating an intent to create AI that supports national security ventures is stark. Militaries are increasingly using AI in war, where their reliance on incomplete or faulty data and flawed calculations increases the risk of civilian harm. Such digital tools complicate accountability for battlefield decisions that may have life-or-death consequences.While the vast majority of countries are in favour of multilateral controls on AI-powered weapons systems, European foreign ministers and civil society representatives noted during an April 2024 conference in Vienna that a small number of powerful players including the UK, US and Israel are holding back progress by being part of the select few countries to oppose binding measures.Timothy Musa Kabba, the minister of foreign affairs and international cooperation in Sierra Leone, said at the time that for multilateralism to work in the modern world, there is a pressing need to reform the UN Security Council, which is dominated by the interests of its five permanent members (China, France, Russia, the UK, and the US).I think with the emergence of new realities, from climate change to autonomous weapons systems, we need to look at multilateralism once again, he said, noting any new or reformed institutions will need to be inclusive, democratic and adaptable.Read more about military AIMoD sets out strategy to develop military AI with private sector: The UK Ministry of Defence has outlined its intention to work closely with the private sector to develop and deploy a range of artificial intelligence-powered technologies, committing to lawful and ethical AI use.Government insists it is acting responsibly on military AI: The government has responded to calls from a Lords committee that it must proceed with caution when it comes to autonomous weapons and military artificial intelligence, arguing that caution is already embedded throughout its approach.AI can never be given control over combat decisions, Lords told: Artificial intelligence is technically incapable of distinguishing between the complex contextual factors of combat situations, and will likely never be able to, according to legal and software experts.
    0 Kommentare ·0 Anteile ·28 Ansichten
  • Unionised drivers to stage ride-hailing app strike
    www.computerweekly.com
    Thousands of unionised drivers working for ride-hailing apps are striking to demand better pay and workplace safety protections, in line with court decisions that have said drivers should start being paid as soon as they log in.First announced by Addison Lee drivers who staged a similar strike action in September 2024, drivers with Uber and Bolt organised under the Independent Workers Union of Great Britain (IWGB) are also planning to collectively log off from the apps en masse to protest their low pay and insecure work conditions on Valentines Day 2025.They said the algorithmically induced precarity they face as app workers means many drivers are being pushed into 70-hour or 80-hour work weeks to make ends meet, all while the companies continue to take significant commissions and refuse to pay them for their full working time.This is in spite of three separate court rulings that said drivers for Uber, Bolt and Addison Lee are legally classed as workers and should therefore be paid for the entire time they are logged into the apps, not just when they are assigned to trips.Nader Awaad, chair of the IWGBs Private Hire Drivers branch, said that drivers represent an essential part of the UKs transport system and therefore deserve to be well paid for their work, especially in the context of soaring profits for their employers (particularly Uber and Bolt).Speaking with Computer Weekly, Awaad outlined how the algorithms deployed by the app operators are pushing work conditions down for everyone by pitting drivers against one another.Highlighting how this works with Uber specifically, Awaad said its systems will send out the same job to a number of drivers, while showing each of them different fares: The driver who takes the cheapest fare will get the job. The market is flooded with new drivers every week, so now theyre having to fight each other for the same job because Uber will rely on new drivers who dont have experience to take the job when others realise it has no value.He added that this is exacerbated by a lack of transparency about how the algorithms work: We are fighting against sophisticated computer systems, which manages all of these operations for them. This doesnt leave us with any option other than to organise a protest.Computer Weekly was previously told by drivers organised under the App Drivers and Couriers Union (ADCU) that, in the case of Uber, its dynamic pricing algorithm in combination with its upfront pricing policy means the data inputs used by the algorithm to make decisions about their pay and trips are completely hidden from drivers, who are only shown a fixed fare for a trip, along with riders.Drivers dont see fares that customers accept, which allows Uber to take more of the commission, said ADCU London vice-chairman, Zamir Dreni.A separate protest being organised by the ADCU for 11 February 2025 will see their drivers making similar demands for higher fares, lower commissions and improved rights for drivers.While Uber initially charged a 20% to 25% commission for every trip in the UK, drivers are saying the firm is now taking around half of every fare as commission. Bolts current commission rate stands at around 15% to 20% depending on the city its operating in, although drivers have reported higher to their unions. IWGB drivers said that Addison Lee can take up to 70% of their fares as commission, and called for it to be capped at 30% during their last log off strike in September 2024.IWGB told Computer Weekly that while it would be safe to assume that all three operators are regularly taking over 50% commission based on what unionised drivers are reporting, the lack of algorithmic transparency means they do not have access to concrete data that would enable drivers to more effectively challenge the companies over pay issues.According to Awaad, while roughly 20% of any commission represents government VAT, the companies have chosen to push these costs onto the drivers rather than consumers, which is why nearly half of every fare is lost to the drivers: They have an interest in keeping their customer base high. If they apply VAT on the customer, they will lose some of them.Awaad further outlined how unionised drivers are also calling for the introduction of safety measures such as ID verification for riders (not just drivers as it is now); complaint-tracking systems to ensure issues with customers are dealt with in a timely and fair manner (as Awaad and other drivers say their employers tend to reflexively side with customers, leading to unfair account deactivations); and more support for drivers who are victims of assault.As part of the strike action which includes a planned demonstration and motorcade outside London City Hall IWGB drivers will also hold a candlelit vigil for Gabriel Bringye, a driver and fellow union member killed by a passenger in Tottenham in February 2021 while working for Bolt. The union said that, since then, Bolt has still not met its demands for meaningful safety improvements, nor compensated the family for their loss.Awaad added that while drivers have previously made demands to operators for password protections and customer verification on the apps (as Gabriel Bringyes killer used a stolen phone), these have been ignored by the companies.IWGB member Saifullah Hussainkhel, an Uber driver for 12 years, said the strain of working for ride-hailing apps is severe: I have to work 30 hours a week just to cover my driving costs, before I can even start earning money to take home and support my family.My GP has just put me on antidepressants because the longer and longer hours on the road are affecting my mental health. What kind of lives are we leading if we dont have the time to see our families, to exercise, to rest, or take a single holiday? We cant afford to stay silent any longer.A driver for Addison Lee, who wished to remain anonymous due to fear of repercussions, added that health problems, depression and debt are pervasive among the ride-hailing app workforce.The bosses have no humanity just last month they were found lying in court to try to deny us workers rights, they said, referring to a January 2025 employment tribunal finding that the company had falsified an email that formed a key part of the firms evidence.We know they will not choose to make our lives easier until we force them to. Its incredible to see that a log-off campaign which began with Addison Lee drivers back in September last year, has now inspired drivers working across all apps in cities all over the UK to stand up, join the movement and claim back what we deserve.The same employment tribunal ruled that Addisson Lee drivers are workers rather than self-employed contractors, and therefore entitled to rights such as holiday pay, the national minimum wage, rest breaks and protection from unlawful discrimination or whistleblowing. It also ruled that all drivers are working for the company during the times they are logged onto its app or mobile device.As Valentines Day is one of the busiest nights for private hire services, drivers said the strike could have an impact on availability and pricing for passengers, which they hope will prompt the companies into addressing their concerns.Computer Weekly contacted all three app operators about the planned log-off strike, as well as their employees concerns and demands.We recognise the vital role drivers play in keeping cities moving, and remain committed to ensuring our prices balance the earning needs of drivers with affordability for passengers. We are the only operator that enables drivers to set their own minimum pricing and take advantage of dynamic pricing, where fares are based on market conditions, said a Bolt spokesperson.All drivers receive holiday pay and monetary supplements to ensure they earn at least the national living wage, alongside a pension. Feedback is important to us, and we continue to engage with drivers directly through surveys, community events and in-person forums.The spokesperson added that Bolt has committed 100m over three years globally to support the critical work of its Safety Team, and are constantly assessing and improving the protections available to drivers, and introducing features as a direct result of feedback.According to the spokesperson, this includes the ability for drivers to share their real-time location with friends and family; an in-app emergency assist button that connects directly to the emergency services and notifies Bolts safety team; and trip vehicle monitoring that allows Bolt to detect any unexpected or excessively long stops during rides.Neither Uber nor Addison Lee responded to Computer Weekly.Although the Addison Lee ruling from January 2025 is in line with older court decisions regarding Uber and Bolt, the firms are yet to follow through with paying their workers for the entire time logged on.In November 2024, for example, the Employment Tribunal rejected Bolts claim that drivers are self-employed contractors running their own businesses, finding instead that the terms and conditions the firm applies to its relationship with drivers, as well as the level of algorithmic control it has over their day-to-day work, means they are in fact workers.Overwhelmingly, the power lies with Bolt, said theruling. There is nothing in the relationship which demands, or even suggests, agency. The agency notion is posited simply to defeat the obvious interpretation which the facts invite that Bolt employs the drivers to provide their labour in furtherance of its transportation business.The supposed contract between the Bolt driver and the passenger is a fiction designed by Bolt and in particular its lawyers to defeat the argument that it has an employer/worker relationship with the driver.While Bolt still currently only pays its drivers for time spent on trips, the Employment Tribunal also ruled they should be paid for time spent logged into the Bolt app, providing they are not also logged into apps for other private hire operators such as Uber or Deliveroo a practice those operators refer to as multi-apping.A spokesperson for Bolt said at the time that the firm is reviewing its options, including grounds to appeal the decision: Drivers are at the heart of what we do, and we have always supported the overwhelming majoritys choice to remain self-employed, independent contractors, protecting their flexibility, personal control and earning potential.Responding to questions about the tribunal ruling and why drivers are not being paid from when they log on, a Bolt spokesperson told Computer Weekly that the tribunals findings are confined to drivers that are not multi-apping, and said that around 9 in 10 drivers are online across multiple platforms to maximise earnings.The Employment Tribunal decision followed the UK Supreme Court determining in February 2021 that Uber drivers should also be classified as workers rather than self-employed. That specificlegal challenge was brought by private hire driver Yaseen Aslam and the ADCU.However, although Uber agreed in March 2021 to pay its UK drivers the minimum wage, it said this would only apply for the time they are assigned to trips, rather than,as the Supreme Court explicitly ruled, from the time they log in to the app.In June 2021, theUK Court of Appeal ruled in a case originally brought by the IWGB in 2017 that Deliveroo riders are self-employed, further finding they do not have the right to organise via a trade union.Despite this, one judge conceded that therulingcould be seen as counterintuitive because it is easy to see that riders might benefit from organising collectively to represent their interests, as against Deliveroo.Another judge agreed that the decision may seem counterintuitive, adding: I quite accept that there may be other cases where, on different facts and with a broader range of available arguments, a different result may eventuate.Lord Justice Underhill added that the Uber case, which largely revolved around UK-specific employment law, had no bearing on this Deliveroo case because it did not engage Article 11 of the European Convention on Human Rights (which protects the right to form and join trade unions), adding that, unlike Deliveroo, Uber did not rely on any substitution clause that meant others are allowed to complete the work.In September 2022, the IWGBonce again appealed the ruling, arguing that riders have been denied collective bargaining rights and are yet again seeking to establish their worker status. However, this wasdismissed by the Supreme Court in November 2023, which noted the way riders work with Deliveroo is inconsistent with an employment relationship.Read more about algorithms in the workplaceAI disempowers logistics workers while intensifying their work: Conversations on the algorithmic management of work largely revolve around unproven claims about productivity gains or job losses less attention is paid to how AI and automation negatively affect low-paid workers.European Parliament approves platform worker directive: The approval of the platform worker directive gives member states two years to incorporate its measures into their national legislation, which includes provisions on how to classify the employment of gig workers and deploy algorithmic decision-making at work.Dutch employers should discuss using algorithms in managing staff: Dutch organisations must engage in open discussions with employees about the use of algorithms and data in managing staff.
    0 Kommentare ·0 Anteile ·28 Ansichten
  • How to remotely access and control someone else's iPhone (with their permission)
    www.zdnet.com
    You can connect to and even control another person's iPhone to provide remote tech support.
    0 Kommentare ·0 Anteile ·41 Ansichten
  • I found a MagSafe battery pack that works flawlessly with my Pixel 9 Pro - and its seriously impressive
    www.zdnet.com
    The Sharge Icemag 2 is designed to stay cool while charging, making it a great choice if you're concerned about power banks overheating.
    0 Kommentare ·0 Anteile ·30 Ansichten