Now operating in more than 450 locations021 Archives Uber is sitting on a wealth of data about how our cities operate.
Notorious for its heated battles with local government, the ride hailing service is playing a tad nicer in 2017, making some of that knowledge accessible to infrastructure planners and researchers with a new website called Movement.
SEE ALSO: After 2016 of pushing hard on self-driving cars, Uber started 2017 building for human driversUber product manager Jordan Gilbertson and head of transportation policy Andrew Salzberg said in a statement that Movement aims to help planners "make informed decisions about our cities."
Sharing information around the length of trips and road conditions at specific times and days of the week, Movement aggregates Uber's data, ostensibly allowing planners to take a look at which areas may need new infrastructure investment to speed up trips and ease congestion.
Sharing this kind of data raises obvious privacy concerns for riders, but Uber says the information will be "anonymized and aggregated."
Uber is granting first Movement access to planning authorities, but will let the public in mid-February. The company has partnered with organisations in Washington DC, Manila and Sydney to work on the product and will add more cities shortly, an Uber spokeperson told Mashable.
The American company has been opening up its books in small ways in recent months. In October, it launched the IPA Transport Metric in partnership with Infrastructure Partnerships Australia (IPA) to share data on "road network performance" in Perth, Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney.
Despite initiatives like the IPA Transport Metric and Movement, Uber is not quite willing to share all its data.
In early January, the company emailed New York passengers asking them to protest a rule that demands the company share ride destination information with the city government.
"We have an obligation to protect our riders' data, especially in an age when information collected by government agencies like the TLC can be hacked, shared, misused or otherwise made public," Uber said in a statement at the time.
Topics Uber
Best Peloton Guide deal: 77% off at AmazonGoogle Gemini is now available for the iPhoneTarget Black Friday sale 2024: Dates, early deals, and moreBest Black Friday Beats deal: Solo4 headphones for 35% offBest Black Friday deal: Save up to 24% on Govee lights at WalmartGoogle's Gemini Live may let you talk to it about your uploaded filesBest Black Friday TV deal: 47% off 98NYT Strands hints, answers for November 14Best smartwatch deal: Get the Garmin Epix Gen 2 smartwatch 55% offStephen King responds to rumor that Elon Musk kicked him off XNYT mini crossword answers for November 14NYT mini crossword answers for November 13NYT Connections hints and answers for November 14: Tips to solve 'Connections' #522.Today's Hurdle hints and answers for November 12Apple defended its oddly placed M4 Mac mini power button — here's my take as a new ownerBest Walmart deal: The Shark Pet Pro is just $144 at Walmart.Today's Hurdle hints and answers for November 12Today's Hurdle hints and answers for November 13Get a $15 credit when you spend $50 at Amazon todayBest Black Friday VPN deal: 61% off ExpressVPN Helpmeets, Field Guides, Burning Questions by Sadie Stein 'Platonic' review: Seth Rogen and Rose Byrne deliver the best comedy of the summer Man Pulls Sword over Badly Treated Book: Happy Monday! by Sadie Stein A beginner’s guide to balloon play during sex Dogs, Scientologists, and Ipanema by Sadie Stein 'Ace' is the first book of its kind. Here’s why anyone, asexual or not, should read it. Create Your Own Genie; Listen to Beckett by Sadie Stein Elon Musk will launch Ron DeSantis' presidential campaign on Twitter Spaces U.S. travel safety advisories for marginalized groups: What you need to know Letter from India: When the Cat’s Away by Amie Barrodale Pirate Queen: In the Studio with June Glasson by Charlotte Strick Microsoft has revealed Windows Copilot, its new AI assistant Benjamin Franklin's Clippings, Circa 1730 by Jason Novak Memes are the latest love language, Hinge says TPR vs. Vanity Fair: The Sense of an Ending (With Pictures!) by Cody Wiewandt What We’re Loving: Dorian Gray, Sex with Immortals by The Paris Review What We’re Loving: Eccentrics, Cult Figures by The Paris Review 'Succession': The key line in Shiv's eulogy that links back to a scene in Season 2 Book Mazes, Ugly Covers, Hauntings by Sadie Stein Netflix password sharing crackdown begins: New pricing, rules revealed
2.6744s , 10109.4609375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【2021 Archives】,Unobstructed Information Network