An Uber, Lyft Loophole Denys NYC Drivers Millions in Pay(bloomberg.com)
bloomberg.com
An Uber, Lyft Loophole Denys NYC Drivers Millions in Pay
https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2024-uber-lyft-nyc-drivers-pay-lockouts/
12 comments
By dictating when the drivers can and can't work, it seems the rideshare companies convert the drivers to employees. Contractors get to choose when they work.
Side note: the lying message provided to drivers is particularly scummy: "TLC rules force us to limit access". No they don't. A desire for more money convinces them to limit access.
Side note: the lying message provided to drivers is particularly scummy: "TLC rules force us to limit access". No they don't. A desire for more money convinces them to limit access.
Contractors get to choose when they are available for work. They aren’t guaranteed work. A customer is not obligated to hire them. This is the whole point of a contractor.
Why is a desire for more money a bad thing? The drivers want more money? Stop vilifying basic rational behavior.
Why is a desire for more money a bad thing? The drivers want more money? Stop vilifying basic rational behavior.
> Why is a desire for more money a bad thing?
I never said it was, so I'm not sure why you're asking me this.
> Stop vilifying basic rational behavior.
I never did this, either. Are you sure you replied to the right post?
I never said it was, so I'm not sure why you're asking me this.
> Stop vilifying basic rational behavior.
I never did this, either. Are you sure you replied to the right post?
Many contracted projects are contracted on a longer timescale, often weeks or months, compared to ridesharing where the outputs are expected within minutes. Contractors in other fields can often choose when to work on a day-to-day basis, but their next project will only materialize if the demand is there.
> Contractors get to choose when they work.
Definitely not true of software contractors.
Definitely not true of software contractors.
It should be.
When I've contracted, the general expectation is "make yourself available for agile ceremonies" and a desire for timely collaboration.
If your customer is setting your hours, then they may be breaking labor laws.
When I've contracted, the general expectation is "make yourself available for agile ceremonies" and a desire for timely collaboration.
If your customer is setting your hours, then they may be breaking labor laws.
It’s exactly what many people have said about minimum wage laws for a long time: it makes it illegal to have a job unless you can produce $X in value per hour. Maybe as society we’re ok with that, but it’s lunacy to pretend there are no consequences.